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California grads headed to HBCUs in the South prepare for college under abortion bans

Nurse practitioner Arin Kramer prepares to insert a contraceptive implant under the skin of I'laysia Vital's upper arm, as physician assistant Andrea Marquez (rear) offers support. Vital will attend college at Texas Southern University in Houston, where most abortions are banned.
April Dembosky/KQED
Nurse practitioner Arin Kramer prepares to insert a contraceptive implant under the skin of I'laysia Vital's upper arm, as physician assistant Andrea Marquez (rear) offers support. Vital will attend college at Texas Southern University in Houston, where most abortions are banned.

When I'laysia Vital got accepted to Texas Southern University, a historically Black university in Houston, she immediately began daydreaming about the sense of freedom that would come with living on her own, and the sense of belonging she would feel studying in a thriving Black community.

Then, a nurse at her high school's health clinic in Oakland, California explained the legal landscape of her new four-year home in Texas – where abortion is now banned completely.

Vital watched some TikTok videos of protestors harassing women outside clinics in other states. She realized her newfound freedoms would come at the expense of another.

That's when she added one more task to her off-to-college checklist: get a long-acting, reliable form of birth control before leaving California.

"I don't want to go out there and not know anything, not know where to go, because I'm in a new state. So I'm trying to be as prepared as I can before I leave," she says.

The change is a huge culture shock for Vital and some of her classmates, who, for the last four years at Oakland Technical High School, have had access to their own health clinic on campus.

The "TechniClinic" is a bright purple building across from the football field and bleachers. The school's bulldog mascot is painted near the door. Onside, students can get free, confidential birth control consults and STI checks, and be back at their desks for fourth period math.

This summer, nurses at the Oakland Tech Clinic have formalized the "senior sendoff" appointment, during which they counsel students about their legal rights and their medical options before they leave for college.

The Techniclinic is a school-based health clinic located across from the football field at Oakland Technical High School in California. Staff there are holding "senior sendoff" appointments for graduates headed to colleges in states where abortion rights have been overturned.
/ April Dembosky/KQED
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April Dembosky/KQED
The Techniclinic is a school-based health clinic located across from the football field at Oakland Technical High School in California. Staff there are holding "senior sendoff" appointments for graduates headed to colleges in states where abortion rights have been overturned.

After Roe v. Wade was overturned last year, clinic staffers realized students of color could be disproportionately impacted by changes in state abortion laws. Many of them, like Vital, were choosing to go to historically Black colleges and universities in southern states, where bans and limits on the procedure are more common.

"Many students here are just totally floored when I tell them that these laws are different in the states that they're going to," says Arin Kramer, a family nurse practitioner at the Tech Clinic. Like many adults, "they can't believe that they can't get an abortion in this country."

Kramer has been writing prescriptions for a year's supply of contraceptive pills or patches, which students can pick up all at once.

Under California law, students can get contraception for free, without having to tell their parents or use their parent's insurance plan. Students can pick up the prescription at the school clinic, or Kramer can call it in to a pharmacy near the student's home.

During her own "senior sendoff" appointment, Vital tells Nurse Kramer she is in the market for something even more reliable than pills.

Nurse practitioner Arin Kramer, who works at a health clinic on the campus of Oakland Technical High School, has been advising students headed off to college in states with new abortion bans. She can give them prescriptions for a year's supply of birth control, or insert long-acting contraceptives.
/ April Dembosky/KQED
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April Dembosky/KQED
Nurse practitioner Arin Kramer, who works at a health clinic on the campus of Oakland Technical High School, has been advising students headed off to college in states with new abortion bans. She can give them prescriptions for a year's supply of birth control, or insert long-acting contraceptives.

"Because I'm very forgetful. Even if I set an alarm or write it down, it will still slip my mind," Vital says.

She wants a long-term contraceptive, like an IUD or a hormonal implant that would last for years and require no upkeep.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics have made these options their top recommendation for adolescents, after research from both groups showed they were safe and highly effective at preventing teen pregnancy.

So at Oakland Tech and other school-based health clinics run by nonprofit La Clinica de la Raza, Kramer has trained other nurse practitioners how to insert these devices — so students can get them the same day they ask for them.

Inside a 'Senior Sendoff' appointment

After reviewing the options, I'laysia Vital decided she wanted a contraceptive implant. During their discussion, Nurse Kramer used clear, direct terms, even dropping in phrases students use themselves.

"Who are you talking to these days?" Kramer asks Vital, which is adolescent-speak for: Who are you having sex with?

"Same person," Vital replies.

"You guys have been off and on, off and on," Kramer says. "How do you feel going forward?"

"Well, now they're on because he's going to Texas, too," Vital reveals with a smile. "He's going with me."

Nurse practitioner Arin Kramer bandages I'laysia Vital's arm after inserting a contraceptive implant that will last up to five years.
/ April Dembosky/KQED
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April Dembosky/KQED
Nurse practitioner Arin Kramer bandages I'laysia Vital's arm after inserting a contraceptive implant that will last up to five years.

The clinic staff starts preparing the exam room, so Vital can get the implant right away. Kramer turns on some calming music on her phone, washes her hands and has Vital lie down and raise her left arm over her head. Physician assistant Andrea Marquez comes in to hold Vital's other hand and offer words of encouragement.

"I'm going to count to three and then you'll feel a little pinch," Kramer says, before giving Vital a shot of numbing medication in her tricep. Then she coaches her through a series of deep breaths before inserting the tiny rod under the skin of her upper arm.

The whole procedure takes less than 10 minutes, and Vital walks out with a birth control method that will last her up to five years. Now, she says, she can focus on her education and fully experience the new freedoms of college.

"I'm really excited for the growing up part of it," she says.

Meanwhile, Nurse Kramer heads back to her office. She has a list of other patients to check up on, many headed to states that ban abortion. As they pack their books and bed linens for their new dorm rooms, she's reminding them to also pack a year's supply of contraception, too.

College clinics navigate the new landscape, too

University-based health centers are also reconsidering their clinical protocols in the wake of the Dobbs Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe.

In 2020, only 35% of colleges offered on-site IUD insertion and 43% offered contraceptive implant insertion, according to a survey by the American College Health Association.

That group now recommends college clinics do routine pregnancy screening to identify pregnancies as early as possible, to give students more time to consider their options, and to have legal counsel on-call to advise clinicians on allowable practices.

Attorneys might even help advise university health center about how to have conversations with patients, especially in states like Texas, where local law forbids clinicians from "aiding and abetting" patients who seek abortion care. These new threats — of prosecution or pulled funding — have complicated clinicians' communication with their collegiate patients.

"So I'm going to be vague with my wording, purposefully," said Yolanda Nicholson, director of clinical education at the North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University health center, and chair for the coalition of Historically Black Colleges and Universities of the American College Health Association.

Nicholson thinks the concept of the "senior sendoff" appointment in the student's home state is a great one, given that college health centers in Texas and throughout the South have had to adjust their educational approach with students to be more general and "maybe not as specific or targeted as we would have previously done," to stay aligned with local laws.

Out-of-state students are often shocked to discover they don't have access to the same services as they do at home, she says.

This story comes from NPR's health reporting partnership with KQED and KFF Health News.

Copyright 2023 KQED

April Dembosky
April Dembosky is the health reporter for The California Report and KQED News. She covers health policy and public health, and has reported extensively on the economics of health care, the roll-out of the Affordable Care Act in California, mental health and end-of-life issues. Her work is regularly rebroadcast on NPR and has been recognized with awards from the Society for Professional Journalists (for sports reporting), and the Association of Health Care Journalists (for a story about pediatric hospice). Her hour-long radio documentary about home funeralswon the Best New Artist award from the Third Coast International Audio Festival in 2009. April occasionally moonlights on the arts beat, covering music and dance. Her story about the first symphony orchestra at Burning Man won the award for Best Use of Sound from the Public Radio News Directors Inc. Before joining KQED in 2013, April covered technology and Silicon Valley for The Financial Times, and freelanced for Marketplace and The New York Times. She is a graduate of the University of California at Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and Smith College.