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Navigating Australia’s “abortion deserts”: why is it still so hard? | InSight

Abortion signs protesting roe v wade abortion issue

AFMW Member Professor Deborah Bateson, Professor of Practice at the University of Sydney and former Medical Director of Family Planning New South Wales was interviewed for this inSight+ article.

 


Extract

LEGISLATIVE support for abortion is nationwide in Australia, to varying degrees, but that has limited value if there are not enough doctors willing to prescribe medical abortion, or public hospitals willing to provide access to surgical abortion, say experts.

With the overturn of Roe v Wade by the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) last week, power to determine abortion access in the US has reverted to the states, with abortion bans in Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah and Alabama coming into immediate effect. Louisiana’s ban was temporarily blocked by a District Court judge. Idaho, Tennessee and Texas will implement abortion bans within 30 days of the SCOTUS decision. Abortion bans in Mississippi, North Dakota and Wyoming go into effect when legislative bodies certify the SCOTUS ruling.

Effectively people needing abortions in those states will be forced to either travel to a state where it is legal, carry the baby to term, or risk an illegal abortion with all the health and legal consequences that may entail.

So, surely Australian people needing abortion are in a stronger position than their US counterparts? It turns out, not so much.

“We’ve still got big challenges in terms of access,” said Professor Deborah Bateson, Professor of Practice at the University of Sydney and former Medical Director of Family Planning New South Wales.

Dr Philip Goldstone, Executive Director of Medical Services and Medical Director of MSI Australia, agreed.

“Ideally, women should have access to surgical abortion in their local health district through the local hospital, and ideally they should have access to medical abortion through a GP in their local area,” he told InSight+.

But in reality, for people needing abortion services outside the major cities, nothing could be further from the truth.

“There’s an outcry that US women are going to have to travel hundreds of kilometres across two states to access abortion now,” he said.

“Well, our states are bigger in Australia, and there are women that have to travel hundreds of kilometres from, for example, Far North Queensland to Brisbane or from the top of Western Australia down to Perth.

“We have huge ‘abortion deserts’ in Australia.”

 

Continue reading the full InSight+ article…

(photo credit – inSight+)

 

 

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