As clinics pivot post-Roe, battle rages over syringe service in opioid-ravaged West Virginia

FILE - City of Charleston Quick Response Team Coordinator Danni Dineen, a recovering heroin user, speaks in support of a proposal from the Women's Health Center of West Virginia to add a syringe service program to its offerings during a public hearing at the Goodwill Prosperity Center in Charleston, W.Va. on Thursday, July 27, 2023. (AP Photo/Leah Willingham, File)

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Staff at Women's Health Center of West Virginia know what it's like to provide controversial health services that government officials have sought to ban or restrict.

The Charleston clinic was the state's for years until the state Legislature passed a on the procedure last year. The clinic remained open, providing other reproductive care. Now it's trying to open a for drug users, which is another that has been regulated by Republican lawmakers in the deep red state.

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