The clinics provide family planning and sexual health services to more than 34,000 patients a year.

“People right now are feeling a little anxious about whether there will be insurance coverage and what it will cover, so they are making appointments right now to get in,” Kogut said.

Similar increases in calls for women seeking long-acting contraception have been seen at Planned Parenthood clinics across the country, she said.

The day after the election, clinics nationwide saw a 957 percent increase in appointments booked online to get long-acting contraception, compared to the average number of daily appointments for the previous month. The appointments have leveled off, but remain an average of 128 percent higher than the month before the election, Kogut said.

Dr. Denise Willers, medical director for the Women and Infant Care Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, said she hears concerns. “Providers are apprehensive and patients are apprehensive,” she said, “and I think we all are waiting to see what happens.”

Thompson said she doesn’t want to wait. Birth control pills are not safe to take with her heart condition, and condoms are too risky.