Kiwi women are getting abortions earlier in their pregnancies, study finds

Kiwi women are getting abortions earlier in their pregnancies, study finds

Brittney Deguara
Apr 10 2019

New Zealand women who undergo an abortion are having the procedure earlier in their pregnancies, according to a new study.

The proportion of terminations that happen in the first 9 weeks of pregnancy has risen by 20 per cent in the last 10 years according to the study, published in BMJ Sexual and Reproductive Health.

Continued: https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/health/111917883/kiwi-women-are-getting-abortions-earlier-in-their-pregnancies-study-finds


USA – Maybe the Only Way to Know What’s Wrong With Abortion in America Is to Have One

Maybe the Only Way to Know What’s Wrong With Abortion in America Is to Have One

By Nona Willis Aronowitz
Jan 31, 2019

I knew that the time I was sloppy with protection right before ovulation would put me at risk for getting pregnant. I’m the kind of woman who learns about fertility for fun, who genuinely enjoys reading about cervical fluid, egg freezing, and progesterone spikes. Which is why I knew I should have taken Plan B after that slipup and was hard on myself when I didn’t. But I also knew that if an unplanned pregnancy did occur, I’d have options in New York City.

I knew, too, that the length of my luteal phase — the two weeks or so after ovulation — is identical month to month. So when it was one day longer than normal, I knew I could find a pregnancy test that would measure miniscule levels of hCG hormone in my urine. But despite what felt like an encyclopedic knowledge of the female reproductive system, I didn’t know much about the medical intricacies of abortion by the time I needed to get one.

Continued: https://www.thecut.com/2019/01/whats-wrong-with-abortion-in-america-heartbeat-bills.html


Netherlands: Doctors challenge health minister over abortion pill law

September 7, 2016
Photo: Regering.nlPhoto: Dutch Health Minister Edith Schippers (Regering.n)
Doctors and pro-abortion campaigners are taking the health insurance ministry to court for failing to provide clear guidelines about the use of a pill which triggers early miscarriage, according to medical journal Medisch Contact.
The doctors disagree with the health inspectorate which says doctors cannot prescribe the pill until the law has changed because they would be committing a criminal offence.
[continued at link]
Source: DutchNews.nl
Additional explanation: Health Minister Edith Schippers has stopped GPs from providing early abortions, which have always been done outside the criminal law and are not subject to the same restrictions, including a 5-day waiting period. Many women prefer to go their GP instead of to a hospital or clinic. But now she's introducing a new law that will require GPs to apply for licences to do early abortions, and they (both early abortions and the doctors) will be subject to the criminal law. This serious deterioration of abortion rights in Holland will lead to reduced access and later abortions.