Religious Anti-Abortion Center Finds Opportunity in Town Without OB-GYNs

A woman sits in a chair at a crisis pregnant center. The wall behind her has Biblical scripture written on it: "Come to me & I will give you rest." A TV monitor next to her shows a slide that reads, "Be a role model. What you do and say and how you act becomes what they want to be."
Janine Shepard, executive director of 7B Care Clinic in Sandpoint, Idaho, says she hopes the pregnant women who seek help from the anti-abortion organization feel supported enough to make a "life-affirming" decision. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez/黑料吃瓜网 News)

SANDPOINT, Idaho 鈥 An anti-abortion pregnancy center on the outskirts of this Idaho Panhandle town greets visitors with an abridged Bible verse painted on the wall of its waiting area: 鈥淐ome to me & I will give you rest.鈥

7B Care Clinic has been operating in Sandpoint since 2001 and was previously called Life Choices Pregnancy Center and Sandpoint Crisis Pregnancy Center. It is of a nationwide network of Christian evangelical centers called Care Net. 7B, one of about 1,200 pregnancy centers affiliated with Care Net, offers pregnancy tests, limited ultrasounds, parenting and life skills classes, community support groups, and other free resources, such as children鈥檚 clothing. Donations from people, businesses, and more than 40 churches keep 7B鈥檚 operations running, Executive Director Janine Shepard said.

Such centers are known as crisis pregnancy centers or pregnancy resource centers. They offer limited resources and medical services to pregnant women and aim to dissuade them from having abortions. Healthcare groups including the have said many crisis pregnancy centers use unethical and deceptive practices to bring women into their organizations.

Traffic at 7B has picked up since the local hospital and its OB-GYNs moved out of state three years ago. The closure left a hole in reproductive health services in this town of more than 10,000 on the shores of Lake Pend Oreille and surrounding rural areas.

“We are seeing a lot more people,鈥 Shepard said.

An exam table lined with paper is next to an ultrasound machine and computer monitor.
7B Care Clinic provides limited ultrasounds in the Sandpoint, Idaho, area. Shepard says the majority of women who see their ultrasounds go through with their pregnancies. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez/黑料吃瓜网 News)
A variety of baby clothes in various colors are hung on display racks.
The crisis pregnancy center also provides gently used children’s clothing and other items at no cost. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez/黑料吃瓜网 News)

By December 2024, more than two years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned nationwide abortion rights in its Dobbs decision, Idaho had of its OB-GYNs. 7B is expanding, with the goal of bringing obstetric care back to Sandpoint. The organization plans to add to its current building once it鈥檚 paid off, Shepard said, and it鈥檚 in talks with a hospital about 30 miles away in Washington state to bring in an OB-GYN once a week to provide prenatal care.

If obstetric care existed now in Sandpoint, Shepard said, 鈥渨e wouldn鈥檛 even be considering鈥 the expanded services. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 such a need. And our community suffers because of it.鈥

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As rural communities face the and , crisis pregnancy centers are growing in influence. Some states have approved legislation granting the organizations greater protections from oversight and regulation, and clinics have seen a massive and in recent years.

In a town with limited maternity care, 7B has been providing important resources to struggling low-income women. But critics say the religious nonprofit, which is not medically licensed and isn鈥檛 required to meet regulatory standards for medical facilities, has an agenda that makes it an inappropriate place for pregnant patients to seek medical care.

The words, "Come to me & I will give you rest" are displayed on a wall. A TV monitor mounted on the wall shows a slide that reads, "Tell them about God. They will measure the reality of your life against how they hear things are supposed to be."
A message from Christian Scripture is displayed in 7B Care Clinic’s lobby. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez/黑料吃瓜网 News)

Jen Jackson Quintano, a Sandpoint resident and the founder of the Pro-Voice Project, a nonprofit that advocates for abortion rights in Idaho, said crisis pregnancy centers mislead patients by drawing them in with the offer of free pregnancy-related services before delivering their anti-abortion pitch.

鈥淲e all need clarity on what those services are: ministry-first, rather than comprehensive medicine,鈥 Quintano said.

Shepard said there are misconceptions about the organization, and she invites people to take a tour of 7B to learn what it does. She said her staff talk to pregnant women about abortion, adoption, and parenting as options and hope they feel supported enough to make a 鈥渓ife-affirming鈥 decision.

7B reflects a trend of crisis pregnancy centers seeking to expand their operations in maternal care deserts and regions with gaps in women鈥檚 healthcare, said Andrea Swartzendruber, an associate professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Georgia College of Public Health. Swartzendruber has studied crisis pregnancy centers in the U.S. since 2018.

鈥淐risis pregnancy centers have, for years and years, capitalized on gaps in access to healthcare,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n no way, shape, or form do crisis pregnancy centers have the infrastructure or ability or training to bridge those gaps.鈥

According to Swartzendruber鈥檚 research, more than 2,600 crisis pregnancy centers operated in the U.S. as of 2024, more than three times the number of . Many centers have been found to engage in with clients, including putting misleading information on their websites making them appear to be legitimate medical clinics with the goal of attracting women who are seeking abortions.

An exterior shot of 7B Care Clinic.
7B Care Clinic, a few miles from downtown Sandpoint, Idaho, is an affiliate of Care Net, a national evangelical network of about 1,200 crisis pregnancy centers. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez/黑料吃瓜网 News)

The organizations are also seeing support from the Trump administration. On May 10 鈥 Mother鈥檚 Day 鈥 the Department of Health and Human Services sharing resources and information for new and expectant mothers. It includes a map to find pregnancy centers and cites services the centers provide, such as pregnancy tests, ultrasounds, and medical referrals.

鈥楾he Perfect Place for This鈥

Sandpoint is a small mountain town in a deeply conservative and Christian part of a state with a strict abortion law put into place after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

Amelia Huntsberger, one of the OB-GYNs who left Sandpoint three years ago, said the town is 鈥渢he perfect place for this,鈥 referring to the expansion of the 7B Care Clinic.

In underresourced areas, the benefits that crisis pregnancy centers may bring are welcome.

Lori Sabin, a licensed midwife in Bonners Ferry, about 30 miles north of Sandpoint, said that 7B is a helpful resource to the community, especially for people who struggle to get healthcare because of a lack of health insurance or who face challenges in traveling for care.

鈥淭he nicest thing about 7B is all their services are free,鈥 Sabin said, adding that the classes and free baby items are particularly helpful for young first-time mothers. 鈥淭hey can point them in the right direction. They tell them where the midwives are; they tell them where the OBs are.鈥

Huntsberger, who practiced in Sandpoint for more than a decade and now lives in Oregon, also acknowledged the benefits she saw 7B bring for patients, including the parenting classes and support groups. But she has concerns about its resemblance to a medical facility that provides healthcare.

Lisa Battisfore, founder of Reproductive Transparency Now, a Chicago-based organization that provides education and outreach about crisis pregnancy centers, acknowledged that the limited services they provide can be helpful but said the bad outweighs the good.

鈥淚f someone needs diapers or someone needs formula and a crisis pregnancy center is willing to give that to them, it鈥檚 difficult to say that that in isolation is a bad thing, but you have to look at the bigger picture,鈥 Battisfore said.

Crisis pregnancy centers are largely unregulated and are protected by First Amendment rights to free speech and religious exercise. The Supreme Court crisis pregnancy centers to go to court to block a state attorney general鈥檚 subpoena for donor funding information. Critics say lack of oversight allows centers to spread misinformation about abortion and abortion pill 鈥渞eversal,鈥 a procedure the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has called 鈥.鈥

Crisis pregnancy centers have against states trying to increase regulation and oversight. Those protections have allowed some of the organizations to blur the line between anti-abortion activism and medical care.

A photo of anti-abortion protesters in front of the Supreme Court. They hold signs reading, "I am the pro-life generation," and "We don't need Planned Parenthood."
Anti-abortion advocates hold signs in front of the Supreme Court on June 25, 2018. (Zach Gibson/Getty Images)

鈥淭hey seem to be really good at walking on both sides of that line when it suits them best, and that does not suit pregnant people best,鈥 Battisfore said.

She referenced a recent case in Texas in which a woman was hospitalized for an ectopic pregnancy days after she received an ultrasound and a clean bill of health from a crisis pregnancy center. An OB-GYN who works with the Abundant Life Pregnancy Resource Center 鈥渢here is nothing to fix鈥 when asked about the error. There have been at crisis pregnancy centers.

What鈥檚 Next for Sandpoint

angered a lot of locals when it closed its labor and delivery unit three years ago. Residents lamented that women needed to travel farther to give birth and mourned the loss of the OB-GYNs. Since then, the hospital has been working to rebuild trust with the community.

This year, the hospital created a women鈥檚 health committee that includes hospital board members, staff, and others. Hospital CEO John Hennessy and Chief Medical Officer Stacey Good, a physician, said their priority is to hear from the community and increase awareness about the women鈥檚 healthcare that鈥檚 still available.

A man and a woman stand next to each other.
Bonner General Health CEO John Hennessy and Chief Medical Officer Stacey Good say the Sandpoint, Idaho, hospital is working to rebuild trust in the community after its labor and delivery unit closed three years ago. (Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez/黑料吃瓜网 News)

Women can still receive a range of services, including prenatal care from a nurse practitioner who travels to Bonner General from Coeur d鈥橝lene once a week and other clinicians who can provide more basic gynecological care. A position for a gynecologist at the hospital has been open since May 2023, and Hennessy said filling it remains a priority.

Sandpoint resident Makayla Sundquist, a licensed counselor, grew up in town. She got married last year and has been thinking about starting a family with her husband. She wondered if she would feel safe knowing she鈥檇 need to travel at least an hour to the nearest hospital with labor and delivery services.

But she also has doubts about 7B as a potential option for local care. She was skeptical that an anti-abortion, faith-based organization would provide accurate information on the options available to her.

鈥淚t is something that I do think about and do have fear about,鈥 Sundquist said. 鈥淚 wish that wasn鈥檛 my reality.鈥

Related Topics

Health IndustryRural HealthAbortionHospitalsMountain States BureauReproductive HealthTrump AdministrationWomen's HealthIdahoWashingtonOregonTexas

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