NETHERLANDS – Online platform for abortion pill paused after 5 days over high demand

Tuesday, 31 March 2026
NL Times

Thuisabortus.nl, the website where women who want to terminate an unwanted pregnancy can get the abortion pill online, has been paused just five days after its launch. The demand was much higher than the medical team behind the site expected, and they could not keep up with assessing the requests. The site received around 30 requests per day, 150 in total, initiator Peter Leusink, a house doctor and sexologist, told NU.nl.

Women who want to terminate an unwanted pregnancy can go to the site up to 9 weeks into that pregnancy. They have to complete a questionnaire that a team of doctors assesses before approving the request. Upon approval, the abortion pill is sent to a pharmacy, where the woman can collect it.

Continued: https://nltimes.nl/2026/03/31/online-platform-abortion-pill-paused-5-days-high-demand


Remembering Dr. Susan Robinson, Pioneer in Abortion Care Later in Pregnancy

Robinson, who passed away last month, was inspired to practice after she met Dr. George Tiller, who was later killed for his abortion work.

Dr. Shelley Sella
Mar 31, 2026

My flight had just landed in Milwaukee, where I was scheduled to give a talk that day for the local chapter of Medical Students for Choice. I opened an email from Dave, Susan Robinson’s husband, and read that Susan had died early that day. I was sad but not surprised. We had spoken two days earlier. At that time, I was in Chicago, and she told me that she was “circling around the drain. Truly.” Truly, because she had used the same phrase months earlier, shortly after her diagnosis of widespread lung cancer, and because she greatly surprised both herself and her legions of friends by her relative longevity.

Susan Robinson graduated from the University of California, San Diego medical school and completed her residency at Tufts, in Boston. She began providing abortion care in a spirit of defiance after three abortion providers were killed in the 1990s. Her attitude was “I’ll show them,” and she did. Before turning to third-trimester abortion care, she trained innumerable providers in California in early abortion care with impeccable technique and compassion. Her mentees are legion and continue to revere her.

Continued: https://www.harpersbazaar.com/culture/politics/a70884251/dr-susan-robinson-late-term-abortion/


States pass laws allowing pregnancy centers to evade regulation and countersue for damages

Mar 31, 2026
By Kelcie Moseley-Morris

States with and without abortion bans are advancing bills that would shield anti-abortion pregnancy resource centers from certain government mandates and attempts at regulation, allowing them to sue for damages if any part of the law is violated.

At least four states introduced the legislation this session, and two of them, Kansas and Wyoming, made it law. Montana also passed a similar law in 2025. The bills are still pending in Oklahoma and New Hampshire.

Continued; https://www.newsfromthestates.com/article/states-pass-laws-allowing-pregnancy-centers-evade-regulation-and-countersue-damages


Action Canada and Global Partners Unite to Advance Equitable Reproductive Health Amid Rising Global Rollbacks

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 30, 2026

Ottawa, ON — Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights alongside leading international partners are proud to announce the launch of the Strengthening Health Systems Integrated & Transformative SRHR (SHIFTS) project — a groundbreaking initiative designed to transform how sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) are delivered in Benin, Mozambique, and Nigeria, through resilient, integrated health systems.

“This work has never been more urgent,” says Meghan Doherty, Director of Policy and Advocacy at Action Canada. “In a moment where the health and rights are rights of women girls and marginalized people are under threat around the world in, we are building coalitions that will hold the line and work for change.”

Continued: https://www.actioncanadashr.org/news/2026-03-30-action-canada-and-global-partners-unite-advance-equitable-reproductive-health-amid-rising-global


Experts Call for Increased Support for Post-Abortion Care in Northern Uganda

Patrick Uma 
March 29, 2026

Health experts have called on government and stakeholders to strengthen support for post-abortion care (PAC) services, citing rising cases of unsafe abortions that continue to endanger the lives of women and young girls in Northern Uganda.

Dr. Francis Pebalo-Pebolo, a Senior Gynecologist and lecturer at Gulu University School of Medicine, made the appeal while speaking to journalists during a Health Café organized by the Health Journalists Network Uganda.

He expressed concern that many women and girls resort to unsafe abortion methods, often leading to severe complications.

Continued: https://chimpreports.com/experts-call-for-increased-support-for-post-abortion-care-in-northern-uganda/


ZIMBABWE – Between law and life: Zim’s painful abortion dilemma

Rumbidzayi Zinyuke, The Sunday Mail
29 Mar 2026

When she discovered she was pregnant, 17-year-old Rudo (full name withheld) felt her world collapse.

“The first emotion that engulfed me was disappointment. I felt like I had let down my family. Fear quickly followed. I was afraid of my parents, my siblings and even my church community.

Overwhelmed by shame, she withdrew into silence, choosing isolation over seeking help.

Continued: https://www.pressreader.com/zimbabwe/the-sunday-mail-zimbabwe/20260329/282054808573180


USA – Separating Abortion and Pregnancy-Loss Care Harms Everyone

New bills seek to reinforce a false binary between abortion care and care for pregnancy loss, but this will only harm pregnant patients and further restrict access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive healthcare.

Isabel Guarnieri, Kimya Forouzan - Common Dreams
Mar 29, 2026

People experiencing pregnancy complications in states that restrict abortion have died preventable deaths; others have been forced to bleed out while waiting for providers to deem their conditions were life-threatening enough to receive care under narrow legal exceptions or had to travel out of state for emergency abortion care. Meanwhile survivors of rape and incest have been denied care, despite exceptions that supposedly permitted abortion in those circumstances.

This is the new reality of seeking pregnancy-loss care and abortion care post-Dobbs. But instead of addressing the root issue—abortion bans and restrictions—policymakers are advancing a new strategy: redefining abortion itself. These new bills seek to reinforce a false binary between abortion care and care for pregnancy loss, but this will only harm pregnant patients and further restrict access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive healthcare.

Continued: https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/abortion-and-pregnancy-loss


New FIGO-ICM statement on comprehensive abortion care

28 March 2026

As we mark another Global Day of Action to Destigmatize Abortions on 28 March, the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) and the International Confederation of Midwives are delighted to share our first joint statement on comprehensive abortion care (CAC).

Following on from our 2024 joint statement on contraception, this CAC statement unites the guiding principles, strategic aims, policy requirements, professional standards and service actions required to ensure quality, equitable and rights-based CAC. 

Continued: https://www.figo.org/news/new-figo-icm-statement-comprehensive-abortion-care


Maternal Mortality: Bringing new life into the world shouldn’t end with death

Every two minutes, a woman dies from pregnancy or childbirth complications worldwide – even though most maternal deaths are avoidable. When women have access to timely and appropriate obstetric care their outcomes improve dramatically.

27 Mar 2026
Médecins sans frontières

More than 700 women died each day from pregnancy and childbirth complications in 2023, according to a 2025 UN report. Most of these women lived in low- and middle-income countries and did not receive the care they needed. On top of that, pregnant women are especially vulnerable during wars, natural disasters, displacement, and extreme violence. 

Most causes of maternal mortality are similar in many different contexts, which means they are not linked to specific issues related to a particular country. Instead, they are usually the result of structural shortcomings and negligence.

Continued: https://msf.org.au/article/stories-patients-staff/maternal-mortality-bringing-new-life-world-shouldnt-end-death


The conversation around decriminalising abortion must be grounded in evidence

The future of abortion law and services must be guided by evidence, not swayed by anti-abortion rhetoric and misinformation, says Alison Wright

BMJ 2026; 392 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.s603
27 March 2026
Alison Wright, president of Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists

The House of Lords voted last week to support an amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill that removes the possibility of prosecuting women for ending or attempting to end their pregnancy.1 This is a landmark and long overdue moment for women’s healthcare in England and Wales. Yet in the days following the vote much of the public conversation has been shaped by alarming misinformation.2,3,4 Claims that this law reform would allow abortion “up to birth,” remove safeguards, or encourage more women to access abortion later in pregnancy are simply not true.

Continued: https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s603