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Posted: 2024-08-15T13:00:01Z | Updated: 2024-08-15T13:46:00Z

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. Eileen Diamond was going over patient intake forms in her small office next to the waiting room at the abortion clinic she oversees in South Florida.

This patient said not to discuss the cost of the procedure when her boyfriend is in the room, she told a fellow staff member. Diamond is the director of Benjamin Surgical Services International, whose doors have been open for nearly 50 years in the Fort Lauderdale area.

This one has no money, but shes getting close to six weeks, the staff member read off another sheet.

This one already has three kids and is on probation, she needs to get in front of a judge ASAP. This one texted me from the waiting room, she cant afford the ultrasound. This one has a fetal abnormality but just called its too overwhelming to travel with her kids, shes continuing the pregnancy. This ones 16 years old.

Diamond and the staffer went back and forth for several minutes, discussing which of their patients theyd be able to provide care for under the states six-week abortion ban . So many patients call the clinic in a panic that Diamond and the staffer have dubbed themselves the C.R.O. Queens come right over, they tell any patient who calls. Every minute counts, Diamond said.

Its a dreaded but common part of their daily routine since Florida enacted the extreme six-week restriction on May 1. Since then, Diamond estimates theyve turned away 200 patients who were too far along in their pregnancies to get care. And thats just the ones who made it to the clinic: One staffer who answers the phones told HuffPost she turns away between 30 and 40 callers a week. A six-week abortion ban is essentially a total ban ; most people with regular menstrual cycles wont take a pregnancy test until about the four-week mark, once theyve missed their period. This leaves a week or two to access an abortion. For those with irregular cycles, it could take longer.

The past two years have been hellish for people like Diamond who work within the shrinking ecosystem of abortion care in Florida. Many abortion clinics are hanging on by a thread. Restricting care to six weeks has meant fewer patients, which means less income for the clinic. That necessitates sweeping budget and staff cuts that can eventually lead to a clinic shuttering for good. Many clinic staffers told HuffPost it feels as though the walls are closing in on them.