The Atlantic

Losing Planned Parenthood

The organization is closing one-third of its health centers in Iowa, and local clinics are scrambling to pick up the slack.
Source: Rebecca Cook / Reuters

Alexandra Rucinski has been a patient at the Planned Parenthood in Burlington, Iowa, since she unexpectedly became pregnant with her son five years ago. She was 22 years old then, and she didn’t have health insurance. So she drove to the clinic on North 8th Street, where staff helped her understand her options.

Rucinski chose to have the baby, and she has since continued to visit the health center regularly: every three months for her Depo-Provera shot, a form of injection contraception, and once a year for a breast and pelvic exam, so clinicians can monitor abnormal cells in her cervix.

On May 17, Rucinski got an email that her clinic is closing permanently.  

In one of his final acts before as U.S. ambassador to China, Iowa Governor Terry Branstad signed an appropriations into law. The legislation contained a short section discontinuing Iowa’s family-planning network waiver (IFPN), which allows people who don’t

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