NYT has a public api that can be used to track some so-called "stealth edits". Full text is not supported, but the API has endpoints that provide headlines, abstracts, lead paragraphs, and article word counts.
Everything should work. Headlines that do not appear to have changed are resulting in different MD5 hashes and being duplicated in database. I will fix that at some point.
- why are some articles/edits missing?
- The tracker uses the Archive endpoint, which is only updated three times per day (around 3:30PT, 11:30PT, and 19:30PT). Articles can be published and edited before the tracker sees them. If you do not like this, build your own. It takes like 15 minutes.
article info:
- article_id
- 12b87dfe-4c03-538b-8ef5-44cde5a6e106
- pub_date
- 2022-07-11 20:45:59
- section_name
- Opinion
- document_type
- article
- web_uri
- https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/11/opinion/post-roe-health-care-event.html
history:
version: 2022-07-12 03:45:04
What Will Post-Roe Medical Care Look Like? A Times Event
Monday, July 11, 2022
The Opinion podcast host Lulu Garcia-Navarro explores the future of reproductive health care in a virtual event on July 21.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, medical providers were faced with a complex patchwork of state-level abortion bans and prohibitions. In Arizona, medical workers wondered if a century-old law banning almost all abortions and punishing providers with prison time meant that they should stop the procedures. In Wisconsin, a district attorney said he would not prosecute abortion cases after an 1849 state law banning them took effect.
word count: 211
version: 2022-07-12 19:45:05
What Will Post-Roe Medical Care Look Like? A Times Event
Monday, July 11, 2022
The Opinion podcast host Lulu Garcia-Navarro explores the future of reproductive health care in a virtual event on July 21.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, medical providers were faced with a complex patchwork of state-level abortion bans and prohibitions. In Arizona, medical workers wondered if a century-old law banning almost all abortions and punishing providers with prison time meant that they should stop the procedures. In Wisconsin, a district attorney said he would not prosecute abortion cases after an 1849 state law banning them took effect.
word count: 212
version: 2022-07-16 19:45:08
What Will Post-Roe Medical Care Look Like? A Times Event
Monday, July 11, 2022
The Opinion podcast host Lulu Garcia-Navarro explores the future of reproductive health care in a virtual event on July 21.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, medical providers were faced with a complex patchwork of state-level abortion bans and prohibitions. In Arizona, medical workers wondered if a century-old law banning almost all abortions and punishing providers with prison time meant that they should stop the procedures. In Wisconsin, a district attorney said he would not prosecute abortion cases after an 1849 state law banning them took effect.
word count: 229
version: 2022-07-18 19:45:04
What Will Post-Roe Medical Care Look Like? A Times Event
Monday, July 11, 2022
The Opinion podcast host Lulu Garcia-Navarro explores the future of reproductive health care in a virtual event on July 21.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, medical providers were faced with a complex patchwork of state-level abortion bans and prohibitions. In Arizona, medical workers wondered if a century-old law banning almost all abortions and punishing providers with prison time meant that they should stop the procedures. In Wisconsin, a district attorney said he would not prosecute abortion cases after an 1849 state law banning them took effect.
word count: 244
version: 2022-07-21 03:45:05
What Will Post-Roe Medical Care Look Like? A Times Event
Monday, July 11, 2022
The Opinion podcast host Lulu Garcia-Navarro explores the future of reproductive health care in a virtual event on July 21.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, medical providers were faced with a complex patchwork of state-level abortion bans and prohibitions. In Arizona, medical workers wondered if a century-old law banning almost all abortions and punishing providers with prison time meant that they should stop the procedures. In Wisconsin, a district attorney said he would not prosecute abortion cases after an 1849 state law banning them took effect.
word count: 253
archives:
check archive.today for copies of this article.
check archive.org wayback machine for copies of this article.