Our data above reflects how care actually moves. Bordering states, many shaped by Appalachian care networks and migration, often serve people traveling for pregnancy-related care. We also include a small number of rural areas outside of the region facing similar disparities, to make visible how these systems operate across places.
Appalachia makes this truth impossible to ignore. The region stretches across more than a dozen states and holds deep diversity, people whose lives cannot be flattened into a single story. What binds most Appalachian communities is their shared history of extraction and divestment. That history shows up in today’s conditions, including the more than 160 crisis pregnancy centers embedded across the region.
To focus on West Virginia, the only state entirely Appalachian, is not to single out the state, but to see the pattern clearly. Nearly half of the state’s counties, 47.3%, are maternity care deserts, and another 12.7% offer only low or moderate access, not full-spectrum care. The imbalance is obvious, one abortion clinic serving 1.8 million people, in a state where there are roughly 6.8 CPCs per million residents. In a maternal health desert with little abortion access, pregnancy is no longer a choice or a journey; it is a gamble with people’s lives, shaped by policy, neglect and abandonment.
Fear, Faith, and Falsehood
The CPC model thrives on its ability to weaponize fear by exaggerating medical risks and exploiting uncertainty, leveraging faith through deep integration into church networks, and deploying falsehoods by presenting themselves as legitimate medical providers.
And in Appalachia, trust is currency. Anti-abortion networks understand this and have invested accordingly, building volunteer pipelines, leadership benches of medical professionals and political leaders, and long-term relationships over decades.
They have stayed where philanthropy that professes concern for the access and reproductive justice space cycles in and out, and they have built while many funders shift focus during crises and retreat once attention shifts. Unless philanthropy is willing to learn from that strategy, not to replicate its ideology, but to match its commitment, anti-abortion infrastructure will continue to outpace and overshadow our own.
A National Call to Build What Comes Next
We have to tell the truth about our own delay. Too often, those of us with access to platforms and decision-makers, including NCRP, softened language where it should have sharpened. We trusted proximity over pressure, and we allowed politeness to stand in for accountability. A restraint that by no means protected the movement, but protected funders from having to change.
We have used research to try to move resources to the frontlines, and we are listening as organizers tell us plainly: research is not what is missing, reports cannot substitute for action, and data cannot replace decisions. Additionally, its delivery must demand action and leave no room for delay between plenary sessions and abortion bans. In this moment, our responsibility is not to produce more proof, but to use proximity, platform, and relationships to interrupt harm as it is happening.
That means speaking less about the crisis and speaking bold intentions into the rooms where money is held, and decisions are delayed, naming risk aversion for what it is, challenging hoarding in real time, and refusing to let delay masquerade as strategy. What comes next is a grounding in southern-rooted frameworks and leadership for understanding reproductive access and gendered violence that helps funders and frontline partners move out of silos and toward integrated, survivor-centered strategies with real resources behind them. In 2026, NCRP will curate spaces grounded and curated by the people who built this analysis, inviting funders not just to learn, but to act.
Our commitment is to use research as a door, not a destination. To leverage proximity, platform, and relationships to surface the quiet parts in real time, disrupt harmful funding patterns as they are happening, and push resources toward frontline abortion access and care infrastructure with urgency, not permission.
Working from a place grounded in values aligned between what we name, what we build, and a refusal to separate analysis from responsibility. Not cautiously. Not eventually. But now, creatively, collaboratively, and with the courage to build the future we imagine.
Brandi Collins-Calhoun is the Movement Engagement Manager at the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP). A writer, educator and reproductive justice organizer, they lead the organization’s Reproductive Access and Gendered Violence portfolio of work.