Reddit After Roe: A Computational Analysis of Abortion Narratives and Barriers in the Wake of Dobbs

arXiv cs.CL / 3/25/2026

💬 OpinionSignals & Early TrendsIdeas & Deep AnalysisModels & Research

Key Points

  • The study analyzes how abortion narratives on Reddit changed after the Dobbs decision, focusing on uncertainty and newly introduced barriers to access.
  • Using a multi-step computational pipeline over 17,000+ posts from four abortion-related subreddits, the authors classify posts by information-seeking/sharing behavior, abortion stage (before/during/after), barrier type, and expressed emotions.
  • Emotional and psychological obstacles emerge as the most consistently dominant barrier category, with emotions like nervousness, confusion, fear, and sadness frequently present.
  • Topic modeling of model-generated barrier rationales is used to track how discourse evolves in response to shifting legal and cultural contexts throughout 2022.
  • The paper connects information behaviors, barrier categories, emotional expressions, and time-based dynamics to provide a multi-dimensional view of how users navigate abortion-related needs online.

Abstract

The 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization reshaped the reproductive rights landscape, introducing new uncertainty and barriers to abortion access. We present a large-scale computational analysis of abortion discourse on Reddit, examining how barriers to access are articulated across information-seeking and information-sharing behaviors, different stages of abortion (before, during, after), and three phases of the Dobbs decision in 2022. Drawing on more than 17,000 posts from four abortion-related subreddits, we employed a multi-step pipeline to classify posts by information type, abortion stage, barrier category, and expressed emotions. Using a codebook of eight barrier types, including legal, financial, emotional, and social obstacles, we analyzed their associations with emotions and information behaviors. Topic modeling of model-generated barrier rationales further revealed how discourse evolved in response to shifting legal and cultural contexts. Our findings show that emotional and psychological barriers consistently dominate abortion narratives online, with emotions such as nervousness, confusion, fear, and sadness prevalent across discourse. By linking information behaviors, barriers, emotions, and temporal dynamics, this study provides a multi-dimensional account of how abortion is navigated in online communities.