Abortion Report Shows Improvements In Care
The Ministry of Health’s annual report on abortion care in Aotearoa shows improvements in the provision of abortion care following the passage of the Abortion Legislation Act. Ministry data shows 45% of abortions were provided at 8 weeks gestation or less, up from 27% in 2019. The abortion rate itself has mostly remained steady.
ALRANZ Abortion Rights Aotearoa
president Terry Bellamak said, “Early abortions are better
for people because they don’t have to remain pregnant as
long. Also, the earlier the abortion, the safer it is.
Reducing delay was a key benefit of removing abortion from
the Crimes Act and treating it like all other health care.
Actual reduction in delay, as expected, shows the new
abortion system is working much better than the old
one.”
Before the Abortion Legislation Act 2020,
in order to access legal abortion patients had to obtain the
approval of two certifying consultants, which could only be
provided on certain grounds in the Crimes Act. This
antiquated system created delays, causing New Zealand
patients to receive abortion care much later than those in
comparable countries.
Bellamak continued “The
data also shows a big increase in the percentage of early
medical abortions - 36% in 2020, up from 22% in 2019. This
is partly because the new system allows patients to take the
two sets of pills at home, 24 – 48 hours apart, as best
practice requires. And it’s partly because the pandemic
made it necessary for people to avoid going to a service if
possible. Thanks to the new legislation, it was possible for
the health system to provide abortion care during lockdown
via telephone and Zoom.”
Because the old
legislation was passed before early medical abortions
existed, the old law required patients to take both sets of
pills on the premises of the service, even if that meant
having to travel long distances twice.
“Access
will likely improve even further next year as more primary
care practitioners, like midwives, nurse practitioners, and
GPs take up the training to provide early medical abortions
in primary care settings.
“We still think the
Ministry should keep track of the number of patients who had
to be referred to the Ministry’s website because their
health practitioner obstructs access to abortion of the
basis of their own ‘conscience.’ It’s important to
keep track of the problem to understand whether it is
getting better or worse.
“Overall, the report
shows that abortion care has improved in Aotearoa as a
result of the passage of the Abortion Legislation
Act.”
New Zealand reformed its abortion laws in
March of 2020, decriminalising the procedure and aligning it
with other health
care.