Bravo. Anything that opens up access to abortion without shame or difficulty deserves recognition.
For many women the decision to undergo an abortion is difficult enough without the accompanying fear of having to attend an abortion clinic to add to their concerns.
For other women in rural areas or remote regions, accessing abortion is practically impossible.
But a new Australian medical service is hoping to help stop that and give women back the choice to have their abortion comfortably, safely and on their own terms — without even having to visit a doctor or pharmacist.
The Tabbot Foundation has started “over the phone” abortions – where a woman can access a clinic via a series of phone calls and then have abortion medication posted to them.
The only in-person consultation needed are an ultrasound and a blood test at a local clinic — preferably a bulk-billed one.
The service aims to halve the cost of abortion.
Fairfax Media reports the procedure, offered to women up to nine weeks into their pregnancy who do not experience severe periods, should dramatically improve access to pregnancy termination.
You can watch Mamamia Associate Editor Georgina Dent talk about the abortion pill below. Post continues after video.
Offered by the Tabbot Foundation (named after Tony Abbott, who was health minister when RU486 was approved after he tried to veto it, and Tanya Plibersek, who publicly funded the drugs in 2013) a spokesman told Fairfax Media: “Medical pregnancy termination through teleconference is one of the most appropriate medical conditions you can use this for because you don’t have to examine the patient,” he said.