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The World Needs Safe, Self-Managed Abortion: Here's Why.

Safe, legal, affordable, and uninhibited access to abortion⁠ is a global issue and necessity.

Advances in medical research continues to report that self-managed abortions with pills are now a safe optionexternal link, opens in a new tab for people who choose to have an abortion outside of medical settings. While legal restrictions inhibit safe abortionsexternal link, opens in a new tab, many people can still access safe abortions at home with access to the correct pills, medical care, and scientifically-based information. There are still barriers to accessing a self-managed abortion with pills, and some reasons why it’s not always the right choiceexternal link, opens in a new tab for everyone who chooses to have an abortion, but increased access to medical abortion is a huge step towards decreasing the number of unsafe abortionsexternal link, opens in a new tab and expanding people’s choices when they do not want to be pregnant.

The right to a safe abortion and to family planning is a human rightexternal link, opens in a new tab. If you or someone you know wants to access an abortion for any reason, the desire⁠ to make that decision should be enough. No one should ever be asked to justify why they want an abortion. It should be a given that if someone wants to terminate their pregnancy⁠ for any reason, that is reason enough.

Legal Fights for Abortion

Activists around the world are working to create and build on legal frameworks to ensure that people are supported when they decide to have an abortion. In 2019, thousands of people marched the streets of Buenos Airesexternal link, opens in a new tab fighting for their government to legalize abortion, wearing green handkerchiefs, which have become emblematic of the Latin American fight for safe and legal abortion. In 2016, activists in Poland held a strike to protest a complete ban on abortionexternal link, opens in a new tab, which successfully led to the withdrawal⁠ of the ban. Mozambican activists documented the harmful effects of unsafe abortionexternal link, opens in a new tab practices and that led to a legal reform on abortion laws in 2014. All around the world, activists are working to make safe and legal abortion access a reality.

Even in countries like the United States, where abortion has been legal for decades and is still legal in every state, conservative politicians are quickly trying to change that by placing extreme limits on when and how people can get abortions. According to Al Jazeeraexternal link, opens in a new tab: “In 2019, nine US states passed laws effectively banning abortion in the earliest stages of pregnancy, before many women even know they are pregnant.” While none of these bans are currently in effect because of legislative proceedings or court fights, that can change, and meanwhile, abortion remains out of reachexternal link, opens in a new tab for many.

Any ban on abortion, even when not in effect and no matter how seemingly benign, is a step towards a frightening future without the legal right and access to safe, legal abortion. The Turnaway studyexternal link, opens in a new tab, a study that surveyed people who were turned away from getting desired abortions, shows how abortion restrictions often lead to people carrying pregnanciesexternal link, opens in a new tab that they wanted to end. Some people are able to leave a state or country to access an abortion, but others, especially young people and people who don’t have money to cover the expenses of an abortion, might effectively be forced into carrying a pregnancy that they don’t want, a profound violation of their bodily autonomy⁠, and one that often adversely effects both physical and mental healthexternal link, opens in a new tab. In a global context, legal restrictions, expensive abortion options, and stigma influencing whether medical providers are willing to perform abortions can lead people to choose unsafe abortion methods.

Unsafe abortion

Research finds that the number of safe abortions has decreased, and the number of unsafe abortions has increasedexternal link, opens in a new tab in recent years. Between 2010 and 2014, an estimated 25 million abortions were unsafeexternal link, opens in a new tab each year. The vast majority of unsafe abortions take place in developing countries, where maternal death rates are high and access to safe and legal abortion is limited or nonexistent.

People may seek out unsafe abortion methods for many reasons. Since abortion has an ancient historyexternal link, opens in a new tab, people have used many different methods for terminating pregnanciesexternal link, opens in a new tab, including herbs, inserting tools into the vagina⁠, consuming toxic products, or causing trauma⁠ to the pregnant person’s body. There is no research to document the safety or effectiveness⁠ of these methods. According to the Guttmacher Instituteexternal link, opens in a new tab, many people who choose these methods do so because of “greater proximity, lower cost and confidentiality of traditional providers.”

Even in places where abortion is legal, many states and countries have few abortion providers, so if someone wants an abortion and doesn’t live close to a clinic, they may need to travel hundreds of miles or, if they can’t, look for options closer to their home. In 2014, only 10% of counties in the US contained abortion external link, opens in a new tabclinics. Yet, the study Abortion incidence and service availability in the United Statesexternal link, opens in a new tab found that only 39% of women of reproductive age lived in those counties.

In Mozambique, while legal changes to abortion policy in 2014 have given people their more rights to have legal abortions, activists and public health officials have continued to build health infrastructure to make abortion and contraceptive care available on the ground throughout the countryexternal link, opens in a new tab. They are also creating education programs to ensure people who choose to access abortions know about safe options. In Mexico, people choosing an abortion can travel to Mexico City to access an elective abortion before 12 weeks of pregnancy: until recently it was the only state in Mexico that permitted abortion upon request without conditionsexternal link, opens in a new tab. The state of Oaxaca recently decriminalized abortion, but because of the state’s high rate of rural and marginalized populations, there needs to be an effort from the Health Ministry to make abortion services accessibleexternal link, opens in a new tab.

Differences in Access to Reproductive Care

Limits to abortion don’t happen in isolation and don’t have a neutral impact. Just like most other injustices, they impact marginalized people disproportionately.

In the United States, the Hyde Amendment is one of the biggest barriersexternal link, opens in a new tab to poor people and people of color seeking abortion. The Hyde Amendment states that federal funds cannot be used for abortions, unless there is a risk to life or the pregnancy was caused by rape⁠ or incest⁠. This means people on Medicaid cannot use their insurance to pay for the cost of an abortion, unless their state proactively decided to allow state Medicaid funds to be used for elective abortions (only 16 states do). Research from the Guttmacher Institute finds that women of color are insured through Medicaid at higher rates than white women, due to social and economic inequality. Women of color also seek abortions more often than white people do, likely due to lack of health care access and insuranceexternal link, opens in a new tab, which limits access to birth control⁠, and also due to systemic racism⁠ and discrimination. Poor people make up three-quarters of people seeking abortionsexternal link, opens in a new tab. The Hyde Amendment purposefully hits these populations hardest.

Restriction on abortion happens through other means as well. Morena Herrera, founder and president of the El Salvador-based Agrupación Ciudadana por la Despenalización del Aborto, statesexternal link, opens in a new tab, “The most vulnerable are the most affected by restrictive legislation. Obviously, this includes women who live in poverty, but also younger women, and those who have less information and less power to make decisions about their own reproductive processes.” Without access to information, financial resources and flexibility of schedule, it is much more difficult to have a safe abortion.

While much of the language around abortion access is framed as a women’s issue, and it is an issue that predominantly affects women, we must also be aware of the needs of all people who are able to get pregnant and who need access to abortion. Ibis Reproductive Healthexternal link, opens in a new tab studied transgender⁠ and gender⁠-expansive people’s experience with reproductive care. They foundexternal link, opens in a new tab that “high rates of discrimination, denials of care, and limited provider knowledge often lead to [transgender and gender-expansive] individuals experiencing delays in care and receiving inaccurate health information.” These factors, particularly discrimination and stigma, are found to intensify the existing barriers to accessing abortion. Amber Sollenberger, a sex educator and abortion rights activist, talks about the need to recognize the diversity of genders of people who choose abortionexternal link, opens in a new tabsexternal link, opens in a new tab: “providing the most welcoming and affirming environment that you can I think is super important, especially with something that is already so stigmatized.”

People living with disabilities experience a completely different set of issues with regard to their reproductive choices. Nicole Lee, a writer and mother of two living with a spinal cord injury, describes her experience having an abortion after having her first child. The clinic did not provide her with counseling during the abortion process, nor care afterwards. Later on, Lee says that when she decided to have another child, most people outside of her close friends and family questioned her decision. She writes about her experience and explainsexternal link, opens in a new tab that she still considers herself lucky to have been able to make her own decisions about her body and family planning. She states, “Pregnancies have been forcibly terminated, babies and children taken away, and women and girls sterilized against their will. In some countries (including my native Australia), forced sterilization of disabled women still happens.” This is a violation of people’s right to decide if and when they want to have a child, the right of children to be with their parent, and the right to make decisions about their own body.

According to the World Health Organization, of the estimated 25 million unsafe abortions that occur every year, 97external link, opens in a new tab% of them happen in developing countries. They stateexternal link, opens in a new tab, “Complications from “least-safe” abortions can include incomplete abortion (failure to remove all of the pregnancy tissue from the uterus⁠), haemorrhage, vaginal, cervical and uterine injury, and infections.” Most of the deaths due to unsafe abortions happen in Africa, where 29% of the world’s unsafe abortions take placeexternal link, opens in a new tab.

Self-Managed Abortion is a Valid Option

As the World Health Organization explainsexternal link, opens in a new tab, “Abortions are safe if they are done with a method recommended by WHO that is appropriate to the pregnancy duration and if the person providing or supporting the abortion is trained. Such abortions can be done using tablets (medical abortion) or a simple outpatient procedure. Unsafe abortion occurs when a pregnancy is terminated either by persons lacking the necessary skills or in an environment that does not conform to minimal medical standards, or both.”

Because medical abortions — unlike surgical abortion — are safe to use at home and with limited supervision, they are considered safe as long as the person having the medical abortion:

  1. has access to accurate information, and
  2. has access to trained assistance if they should need it.

The Guttmacher Institute talks about innovation around self-managed abortion in restricted contexts in Latin Americaexternal link, opens in a new tab. They say, “Misoprostol use is still highest in Latin America, where the drug has been widely known and available from informal sources for the past two decades; recently, improved access to the Internet in urban areas worldwide has sped up one-to-one interpersonal communication⁠ about misoprostol⁠. One strategy that has been commonly used in Latin America to improve the quality of misoprostol use has been telephone hotlines to answer women’s questions, although the extent of their coverage is unknown and may be limited.” With more resources available through telemedicine, networks of informed groups can provide accurate medical information and help individuals access safe care before, during, and after the abortion. This means that people are more able to choose the safest and best abortion option for themselves.

Choosing an Abortion, Despite Barriers

No matter where you are and the legal constraints on abortion in your area, remember that choosing when and if you want to carry a pregnancy to term should be your decision and your right. We all should have the right to make decisions over our own bodies, and there are organizations and activists around the world and in your community fighting to make sure that everyone does.

If you find yourself in need of support, listen to yourself and your own voice, and reach out to a knowledgeable and supportive organization — including Scarleteen, whose direct services can be found here — and a trusted friend or family member who will help support your choice.

For more information, check out these online resources:

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