Connecticut
Connecticut has the third lowest number of abortion restrictions in the country, along with 6 other states, and has enacted 16 of 25 supportive policies. State legislators should continue passing policies that are known to support women and children instead of enacting harmful abortion restrictions.
3 of
18
Abortion
Restrictions
Restrictions
- Ambulatory surgical center standards imposed on facilities providing abortion
- Hospital privileges or alternative arrangement required for abortion providers
- Restriction on which health care providers may provide abortions
- Gestational age limit for abortion set by law
- Medication abortion restrictions
- Method abortion bans
- Restrictions on abortion coverage in Medicaid
- Restrictions on abortion coverage in private health insurance plans
- Restrictions on abortion coverage in public employee health insurance plans
- Restrictions on the allocation of public funds
- Mandatory counseling prior to abortion
- Parental involvement required before a minor obtains an abortion
- Requirement to have or be offered an ultrasound
- Waiting periods required between time of first appointment and abortion
- Bans on the basis of sex, race, or fetal diagnosis
- Number of abortion providers per women aged 15-44 is below the national average
- Health care providers can refuse to provide abortion services
- Trigger and/or pre-Roe abortion bans
TRAP / Provider Restrictions
Procedure Restrictions
Coverage / Financial Restrictions
Questions Patient Decision-making
Restricts abortion access
Other abortion restrictions
16 of
25
Supportive
Policies
Policies
- Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion
- Telephone, online, and/or administrative renewal of Medicaid/CHIP
- Above average Title X funding per patient
- Contraceptive parity law in place
- IVF insurance or fertility preservation laws
- Medicaid income limit for pregnant women is at least 200% of the federal poverty line
- Expanded family/medical leave beyond the FMLA
- Maternal mortality review board established
- Reasonable accommodations for pregnant workers
- Restrictions on shackling pregnant prisoners
- Paid sick leave
- Workplace lactation rights beyond the federal requirements
- Children can enroll in CHIP with no waiting period
- Physical education for elementary, middle, and high school
- Sex education mandate
- HIV education mandate
- Broad eligibility criteria for early intervention services for children at risk of developmental delay
- Districts must provide full-day kindergarten
- Firearm safety law(s) designed to protect children
- Families receiving TANF can keep child support collected on their behalf
- State minimum wage is above the federal minimum
- Income limit for childcare assistance is greater than 55% of state median income
- No family cap policy or flat cash assistance grant
- Individuals may be eligible for CCDF childcare subsidies if they are seeking employment
- Worksites, restaurants, and bars must be smoke free