Still No Self-referral At Timaru Abortion Service
Over a year after the passage of the Abortion Legislation Act 2020 made it illegal to require people to have a doctor’s referral in order to receive abortion care, South Canterbury DHB’s Timaru service still does not allow pregnant people to self-refer.
Timaru’s breach
is revealed on the Ministry of Health webpage
for South Canterbury. The page says self-referral will
be available ‘in future’, but is not available at
present.
“It’s astonishing that the Ministry
of Health appears to be OK with this. The law is quite
clear. Section 13 of the Contraception, Sterilisation, and
Abortion Act 1977 reads, ‘A qualified health practitioner
may not, as a condition of providing abortion services to a
woman, require the woman to be referred from a health
practitioner.’ And yet that is precisely what appears to
be happening in Timaru,” said ALRANZ Abortion Rights
Aotearoa President Terry Bellamak.
“A year is a
long time to allow the South Canterbury DHB to do this
wrong. How many people have been delayed or even prevented
from accessing abortion care because the Ministry is not
enforcing the law?
“This is different from
starting up new abortion services for the West Coast or
Whanganui, both of which still lack an abortion service at
all. This is not a case of starting something new, but
rather stopping doing something that is now against the law.
How much infrastructure can be needed to stop doing
something?
“Yes, the Ministry is busy, but Covid
is not a permanent get-out-of-jail-free
card.”
New Zealand reformed its abortion laws in
March of 2020, decriminalising the procedure and aligning it
with other health care.
Parliament is currently
considering Louisa Wall’s member’s bill to establish
safe areas around abortion services. ALRANZ supports safe
areas.