The poll shows overwhelming public endorsement of abortion as a form of healthcare, with most respondents favoring broad access across gestational stages and for health‑related exceptions.
A strong majority (80‑90%) frames abortion as healthcare, driving broad support for access at all stages and for health‑related exceptions.
Abortion is characterized as healthcare by some respondents. This frames abortion within the healthcare domain, indicating a perspective that it should be treated like medical care. Agreement with this view ranged from 80% to 90%.
Individuals may support the right to abortion even if they personally would have been eligible for it. The respondent indicated they would have been a good candidate for an abortion but still endorse unrestricted access. Agreement with this stance ranged from 72% to 84%.
Legislators and regulatory bodies should ensure abortion remains available whenever the mother's life or health is at risk, reflecting strong support (80‑91% agree). This aligns with the perspective that abortion is a form of healthcare.
Legislators should require that any abortion regulation contain exceptions for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, with 80‑90% agreement. Viewing abortion as healthcare supports the need for these protective exceptions.
Lawmakers should allow abortion throughout the first trimester, a position supported by 76‑87% of respondents. This is consistent with the view that abortion constitutes health care.
Lawmakers should permit abortion throughout the second trimester, with moderate support ranging from 69‑81%. Recognizing abortion as healthcare underpins this stance.
Legislators should allow third‑trimester abortions if the birth poses significant risk or serious medical complications, a view endorsed by 78‑89% of respondents. This aligns with the framing of abortion as a health‑related service.
Lawmakers should keep abortion legal whenever the fetus is not currently viable, with 78‑89% consensus. Recognizing abortion as health care supports this non‑viability exception.
Legislators should legalize abortion without required justification, reflecting notable support (68‑81% agree). This unrestricted access is consistent with the view that abortion is healthcare and with respondents who support abortion rights even if they personally would have been candidates.
Legislators should adopt a nuanced policy that permits abortion at any stage for rape, incest, or maternal complications, while allowing other reasons up to the last two months of pregnancy, a proposal with moderate support (67‑79% agree). Framing abortion as healthcare and noting personal support for abortion rights reinforce this comprehensive approach.