Abortion is available on the NHS, but only
if you obtain two doctors’
signatures. This can be difficult if you
live in an area with only one GP who is
anti-abortion. Access to abortion services
can be as much of a postcode lottery as
any other service in the UK… This
can make things more difficult for women
as not only does the procedure become more
invasive the further into pregnancy one
gets, but not all clinics perform
abortions up to the legal limit. This
means some women opt to pay privately for
abortions to avoid wait times, where other
women have to wait until further in
pregnancy and\/or travel great distances
to obtain the care they
require.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Thanks to investment and prioritisation by
the previous government, things have
improved: 94% of abortions are now funded
by the NHS, and waiting times have been
drastically reduced. However, these
achievements, like many others, are likely
to be lost as vicious spending cuts
unravel years of positive work.<\/p>\n
And in both Northern Ireland –
despite being part of the UK – and
the Republic of Ireland, abortion is
illegal except under extremely restricted
circumstances. So every year in order to
access safe and legal abortion thousands
of women are forced to travel to England
and pay anywhere between \u00a3400 and
\u00a32,000 for the cost of the procedure,
travel, childcare and time off work. Abortion
Support Network<\/a> works to help these
women by providing financial assistance,
information, a meal and a safe place to
sleep, but they can\u2019t meet the need
on their own.<\/p>\n
There\u2019s also a major problem around
lack of unbiased information and impartial
support around sexual health and pregnancy
choices for young people, especially about
abortion. Many young women are effectively
prevented from making an informed decision
because they are misinformed at school, or
receive biased advice from bogus
counselling services. Education
for Choice<\/a> work to make sure young
people have the facts, but they are a tiny
organisation fighting a wealthy
anti-choice movement.<\/p>\n
Abortion and race<\/h3>\n
The reproductive justice movement
particularly addresses the experiences
and needs of women of colour around
sexual health, parenthood, pregnancy and
abortion. While there are not such large
differences in access to healthcare by
ethnicity in Britain as in the US, there
are some patterns. For example,
according to Department of Health stats,
black British women are almost three
times more likely to have an abortion
than white women (source<\/a>).\u00a0
It\u2019s not clear why this is, but
when I asked Darinka Aleksic, Abortion
Rights<\/a> Campaign Co-ordinator, she
suggested an economic
explanation:<\/p>\n
The argument advanced in the US is
that because minority ethnic women are
more likely to experience poverty and
economic disadvantage, the abortion
rate among these communities is
therefore higher. The Department of
Health in England and Wales does not
include income levels in its abortion
statistics, but Scotland does, and
their figures regularly show that
abortion rates are higher in
economically disadvantaged
areas.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
As Darinka points out, there is a
similar discrepancy in US abortion
statistics, and there\u2019s more in
Part 2 about how this is being used by
the anti-choice movement in America
and starting to be used by our own
merry band of anti-choicers.<\/p>\n