Women living in countries with strict anti-abortion laws have long turned to dangerous methods to end their pregnancies, but the internet has slowly changed the nature of “back-alley” abortions by making the abortion pill available to women across the world.
And a new study that is among the first to analyze the outcomes of women who go online to order abortion pills can do so relatively safely and effectively, even without a doctor and while living in an area where abortion is effectively illegal.
In a new study published this week in the British journal The BMJ, researchers studied the self-reported outcomes of 1,000 women in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland who obtained abortion pills online through Women on Web, an online non-profit that provides medication abortion to women up to 10 weeks gestation in parts of the world where access to safe and legal abortion services is restricted or non-existent. Several of the researchers have an affiliation with the group.
Women on Web says that in most countries, it is not illegal for women to receive medication sent to their home address. However, Ireland and Northern Ireland have some of the strictest abortion laws in the world and women who terminate their pregnancies can face harsh prison sentences.
In order to obtain the abortion pill from the online group, the women filled out a consultation form with information about their medical history were then provided with a prescription for mifepristone and misoprostol, the two medications that, taken together, make up what is generally known as the “abortion pill.” Women on Web gave them real-time instructions and support from doctors.
The internet has slowly changed the nature of 'back-alley' abortions by making the abortion pill available to women across the world.
Overall, 95 percent of the study participants said they were able to successfully end their pregnancies, the researchers found, meaning that they did not have to have surgical intervention after the fact.
Roughly 9 percent of the women said they experienced some kind of symptom for which they were told to seek medical help by their online counselors― and among those women, 95 percent did. The study’s lead author, Abigail Aiken, an assistant professor at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at The University of Texas at Austin, told HuffPost that she and her co-researchers were heartened to see that women who needed subsequent medical care sought it, even though women in The Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland can face harsh prison sentences.
“Women are capable of self-screening for those complications, and the vast majority went to see a physician as advised,” Aiken said.
“It’s safer than the alternatives [such as using a sharp object or a noxious substances] and it’s also safer than continuing a pregnancy and delivering a baby,” Aiken added.
In an editorial accompanying the article, both of which were published in The BMJ on Tuesday, a pair of Canadian researchers who are not involved in the research argued the study suggests that telemedicine abortion provides women living in highly restrictive areas with a “reasonable alternative” to less safe methods or living with an unwanted pregnancy. They pointed out that it is usually the most vulnerable women living in restrictive countries who have to turn to options like suicide, unsafe abortion or having a child they cannot afford and do not want.
In many of the states ... you can travel a long distance and access care in a clinic ― but only if you have the money and the time and the resources and the family support to do that.
The World Health Organization estimates that 22 million unsafe abortions take place worldwide every year ― nearly all of them in developing countries ― leading to roughly 47,000 deaths and more than 5 million complications.
But Aiken believes the findings could also have implications for women in the United States, where abortion is legal, but increasingly under siege. Earlier this month, HuffPost’s Jenavieve Hatch reported on Women Help Women, a Netherlands-based organization that launched a new initiative to provide counseling and instruction specifically to women in the United States who have opted to induce an abortion illegally.
“If you live right now in Texas, where I’m sitting, or in many of the states across the South, the Midwest and Appalachia in particular, you can travel a long distance and access care in a clinic ― but only if you have the money and the time and the resources and the family support to do that,” Aiken said. Indeed, a 2016 analysis in a New York Times op-ed found that internet searches for self-induced abortion are generally highest in states considered to be hostile or very hostile to abortion rights.
Of course, researchers and health care providers who work in reproductive health care must walk a fine line, being careful not to encourage women to induce their own abortions, while simultaneously finding ways to help those who have already decided to do so. Pro-choice advocates argue that banning abortion doesn’t make it go away; it simply drives it underground.
“When you mention ‘self-induced abortion’ to people, they think of that coat hanger,” Aiken said. “This study really powerfully demonstrates that in 2017, it can be a network of people helping each other through a safe and effective procedure.”
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