Skip to main content

Home/ CUPE Health Care/ Group items tagged abortion

Rss Feed Group items tagged

12More

Barriers to abortion create stress, financial strain for Island women: advocates; Abort... - 0 views

  • Canadian Press Mon Dec 21 2015
  • t was when Sarah was getting instructions on finding the unit at the New Brunswick hospital where she would undergo an abortion that she realized the lengths women from P.E.I. have to go to obtain the procedure. The young woman, who didn't want to use her real name, was on the phone for more than an hour as a nurse explained how to navigate the hospital's maze of hallways, and what would happen once she arrived.
  • She made the call discreetly, not wanting her boss to know she would take a day off to make the two-hour trip to the Moncton Hospital to end an unwanted pregnancy. Upset and nervous, the 26-year-old secretly lined up a drive with a friend and arranged to stay in a hotel in Moncton so she would be on time for her 6 a.m. appointment. "That's when it hit me what I was going through," she said in an interview.
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • "You feel isolated and shunned - it hurts your feelings and it just doesn't make sense in this day and age. It just seems like, why wouldn't you help women here?" It is a ritual that plays out routinely for women in the only province in Canada that does not provide surgical abortions within its borders, and one that pro-choice advocates say remains fraught with challenges despite pledges by the provincial government to remove barriers to abortion access.
  • Liberal Premier Wade MacLaughlan announced soon after his election in May that women from P.E.I. would be able to get surgical abortions in Moncton without the need for a doctor's referral, a measure that received guarded praise from pro-choice advocates. Under the arrangement, women who are less than 14 weeks pregnant can call a toll-free line for an appointment and have everything done in one day, when possible. Previously, women needed a
  • doctor's approval and had to have blood and diagnostic work done on the Island before travelling almost four hours to Halifax for the operation. Or they could go to a private clinic and pay upwards of $700 for the procedure. Abortion rights advocates say both are costly and stressful options for women, who rely on volunteers to do everything from finding people to accompany them to the hospital to arranging childcare. Becka Viau of the Abortion Rights Network helps women figure out requirements for bloodwork and pinpoint how far along they are in their pregnancy, as well as line up drivers, babysitters and meals while raising funds to cover things like the $45 bridge toll, phone cards and lost wages.
  • The pressure on the community to carry the safety of Island woman is ridiculous," she said. "You can only look at the facts for so long to see the kind of harm that's being done to women in this province by not having access." Still, for some MacLauchlan's announcement was a significant change for a province that has fought for decades to keep abortions out of its jurisdiction, with some seeing it as the beginning of the end of the restrictive policy. Some say opposition to abortion access is quietly waning on the Island, where it is not uncommon to see pro-choice rallies and political candidates.
  • Colleen MacQuarrie, a psychology professor at the University of Prince Edward Island who has studied the issue for years, said the Moncton plan had been discussed with former premier Robert Ghiz and was considered a first step toward making abortions available in the province. But a month after those discussions, Ghiz resigned. Reached at his home, he refused to comment on the talks but said everything was on the table. "We've created the evidence and we've gotten community support," said MacQuarrie, who published a report in 2014 that chronicled the experiences of women who got abortions off Island. "It has gotten better, but better is not enough. We need to have local access."
  • Rev. John Moses, a United Church minister in Charlottetown, published a sermon that condemned abortion opponents for not respecting a woman's right to control her health and called on politicians to "stop ducking the issue." "To tell people that they can't or to make it as difficult as we possibly can for them to gain access to that service strikes me as a kind of patriarchal control of women's bodies," he said in an interview. "It's a cheap form of righteousness."
  • Holly Pierlot, president of the P.E.I. Right to Life Association, says she's concerned about the easing of restrictions and plans to respond with education campaigns aimed specifically at youth. "Politically, we've certainly got a bit of a problem," she said. "We were disappointed by the new policies brought in by the provincial government and we are concerned by the federal move to increase access to abortion." Horizon Health in New Brunswick says the Moncton clinic saw 61 women from P.E.I. from July through to Nov. 30. P.E.I. Health Minister Doug Currie did not agree to an interview, but a department spokeswoman says that from April to October the province covered 44 abortions in Halifax and 33 in Moncton.
  • "The government made a commitment to address the barriers to access and they acted very quickly on it," Jean Doherty said. It's not clear whether that will be enough to satisfy the new federal Liberal government under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who told the Charlottetown Guardian in September that "it's important that every Canadian across this country has access to a full range of health services, including full reproductive services, in every province." The party also passed a resolution in 2012 to financially penalize provinces that do not ensure access to abortion services. In an interview, Federal Health Minister Jane Philpott would only say the issue is on her radar.
  • This is something I am aware of, that I will be looking into and discussing with my team here and with my provincial and territorial counterparts," she said. Successive provincial governments have argued that the small province cannot provide every medical service on the Island or that there are no doctors willing to perform abortions, something pro-choice activist Josie Baker says is untrue. "We're tired of being given the run around when it comes to a really basic medical service that should have been solved 30 years ago," she said. "The most vulnerable people in our society are the ones that are suffering the most from it. There's no reason for it other than lack of political will."
5More

Ottawa to explore easier access to abortion - Infomart - 0 views

  • Toronto Star Wed Nov 18 2015
  • Health Minister Jane Philpott said the federal government will explore how to improve access to abortion services nationwide, but the details remain a mystery. "Our government firmly supports a woman's right to choose, and believes that safe and legal abortions should be available to any woman who needs it," Philpott said in a statement emailed to the Star that had originally been issued in response to a question from CBC News about access to abortion services.
  • "We know that abortion services remain patchy in parts of the country, and that rural women in particular face barriers to access. Our government will examine ways to better equalize access for all Canadian women," Philpott, a family physician who became federal health minister earlier this month. The Supreme Court of Canada struck down the provision of the Criminal Code regarding abortion in 1988, but differing provincial regulations, funding levels and even the individual choices of physicians means access to abortion services has always been uneven across the country.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Wait times and coverage vary widely between and even within provinces, with only one in six hospitals offering surgical abortions and access is most difficult for women living in rural communities - including First Nations reserves - who may have to travel long distances to get an abortion. Prince Edward Island does not provide any abortion services at all, although it does cover the cost of the procedure for provincial residents who obtain an abortion at a hospital in Moncton, N.B., where no referral is needed, or in Halifax, where women need to be referred by a P.E.I. doctor.
  • Philpott was not available for an interview Tuesday to elaborate on what she has in mind, and spokesman Patrick Gaebel was unable to add many details. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last year that all Liberal MPs would have to vote along pro-choice party lines, but the campaign platform and his ministerial mandate letter to Philpott did not mention anything about improving access to abortion services.
2More

Outside big cities, abortion services still hard to find; Fredericton clinic about to c... - 0 views

  • globeandmail.com Thu May 29 2014
  • Ashley Fraser was just 18 the night she stole away from Prince Edward Island, bound for the nearest abortion clinic. As a college student already raising a one-year-old boy on her own, Ms. Fraser felt she did not have the resources to care for a second child. But because PEI does not provide abortions, she had to drive to the Morgentaler clinic in Fredericton and pay out-of-pocket to end her pregnancy. "The worst part of it all was the struggle to get there," she recalled. That struggle shows no sign of easing for women seeking abortions in PEI or elsewhere in the Maritimes and rural Canada. The PEI government has quashed a proposal for a twice-monthly, hospital-based abortion clinic staffed by three out-of-province doctors, a decision that drew the president of the powerful Washington-based National Abortion Federation (NAF), which represents abortion clinics and providers, to Charlottetown on Wednesday for a news conference aimed at reviving the plan. Meanwhile, the Fredericton clinic that treated Ms. Fraser and sees several dozen PEI women every year will close on July 29, citing lack of funds. As a major international summit on maternal and child health gets under way in Toronto, and as politicians in Ottawa continue to debate the theoretical points of a sensitive issue - should Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau shut out new anti-abortion candidates? - the reality is that abortion services remain hard to find in Canada except in big cities.
6More

If it's medically necessary, why isn't access universal? - Infomart - 0 views

  • The Globe and Mail Mon Mar 16 2015
  • Is it possible, years after a consensus was reached that a woman's rights include reproductive choice, that abortion could become an election issue again? It's hard to imagine that any politician in the country would want to touch a fire that has lain dormant for so long. Yet two anti-abortion groups, Campaign Life Coalition Youth and the Canadian Centre for BioEthical Reform, are attempting to stir the embers with a "#No2Trudeau" campaign targeting what they call the "extremist position" of Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, who has said all his MPs will be expected to vote the pro-choice party line. I can't think that this campaign will get very far, especially when the majority of Canadians accept that reproductive decision-making lies with women, rather than with doctors or the government.
  • But perhaps the very notion of this consensus has made us complacent about abortion access, and blind to the distance that still needs to be travelled before every woman in the country has the safe, affordable, local service that is her right. Take the situation in New Brunswick, for example. Until this year, the province had some of the most restrictive abortion laws in Canada. A woman required the signature of two doctors (in a province where 17,000 people are without family doctors), and it had to be performed by a specialist in a hospital in order to be covered by public insurance. Abortion was a central issue in last year's New Brunswick election campaign, and provincial Liberal Leader Brian Gallant made his pro-choice position clear. After his party came to power, he removed some of the hurdles to access - now, a woman doesn't need two doctors' approval, and a family doctor can perform the procedure. But the government didn't go far enough. Abortion services have been extended to just one extra hospital, in Moncton, and government still refuses to pay for the procedure anywhere else.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • This leaves the women using Fredericton's freestanding Clinic 554, formerly the Morgentaler Clinic (which was forced to shut down after it ran out of money last summer) out in the cold. This situation frustrates Adrian Edgar, Clinic 554's new medical director, to no end. For Dr. Edgar, the main issues are privacy and accessibility. He believes many women in New Brunswick would prefer to have the procedure in a setting more private than a hospital, due to the lingering stigma and social ostracism that surround abortions. There can be repercussion for families, relationships, even jobs. Many women travel to Maine in order to protect their privacy. "I don't know why the government isn't listening to women on this," he says over the phone from Fredericton. "People want to have the procedure in an anonymous way, they don't want to go the hospital. It's a small province. You go to the hospital and everyone knows, and everyone talks ... and it's on your medical record."
  • The situation in New Brunswick just highlights how unequal abortion provisions are across the country. There are 46 clinics or hospitals providing the service in Quebec, but just one in Nova Scotia (in Halifax) and none in Prince Edward Island. That is not universal access. Clinic 554 offers a full range of family health care, and also provides services to the gay and transgender communities. In keeping with Dr. Morgentaler's policy, it will not turn away women who can't afford to pay for an abortion, and Dr. Edgar knows that some patients, especially women who are in vulnerable positions to begin with, are already stretched to the limit. "I feel like it's absolutely unacceptable for people to feel that pressure," he says. "It's Canada, and this should be a publicly funded service because it's a medically necessary one. It doesn't make sense to me that we should be targeting women to pay for health care."
  • Dr. Edgar has been trying to meet with provincial ministers to discuss the funding situation, to no avail. If invited to a meeting, he would point out not only the unfairness of some women having to pay for a service that should be publicly insured, but also that it's actually more costeffective to provide that service outside of hospitals. And, as he points out, the province is in the midst of a cost-cutting exercise to move some services away from hospitals. Why not this one? "I'm trying hard to do the province's job for them," he says, "but I would like not to, very much."
6More

No barrier to abortion on P.E.I. - Prince Edward Island - CBC News - 0 views

  • P.E.I. and New Brunswick are the only provinces which do not pay for abortions performed in private clinics, only those performed in hospitals
  • Island women seeking an abortion are currently sent either to the Queen Elizabeth II Hospital in Halifax, in which case their costs will be paid by the province, or to the private Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton, where they pay for the procedure themselves.
  • From 2006-10, an average of 65 Island women were sent to the QE2 every year. Over that time the provincial health department paid $310,361 for the procedures, or an average of $961 per abortion
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • The private Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton says it typically sees 70-80 Island women per year. From Jan. 1 to Nov. 22, 2011, the number was 73. Most women pay $650 for an abortion at the clinic, although it can cost up to $800 depending on how far along a woman is in her pregnancy.
  • the P.E.I. Medical Society, which represents Island doctors, refuses to speak on the subject of abortion
  • "I don't want to see signs on my lawn when I go home at night," he said, expecting an outcry from anti-abortion activists against any doctor who provides this procedure on P.E.I.
3More

Abortion pill finally receives approval from Health Canada - Infomart - 0 views

  • The Globe and Mail Thu Jul 30 2015
  • After a series of delays, Health Canada has approved the use the medical-abortion drug mifepristone. The approval brings Canada into line with nearly 60 countries where the drug, also known as RU-486, has long been legal, including the United States, Australia and most of Europe. Vicki Saporta, president of the National Abortion Federation (NAF), said in an interview late Wednesday that the approval means women in Canada will now have access to what is considered the gold-standard of medical abortion care. The NAF, which represents about 80 per cent of Canada's abortion providers, has long heard from women seeking access to the drug.
  • "Some have even crossed the border to obtain a medical abortion in the United States," Ms. Saporta said. "There was absolutely no reason, given the outstanding safety record of mifepristone throughout the world, that it was not available in Canada." Mifepristone, when combined with misoprostol, is generally used to terminate a pregnancy between seven and nine weeks. NAF and other organizations that support bringing the medical abortion drug to Canada say it will make ending a pregnancy more discreet and widely available, especially in areas where services are scarce. Ms. Saporta is hopeful the drug will be available by the first quarter of 2016. Health Canada, which had been reviewing the decision since December, 2012, did not make anyone available for an interview late Wednesday. In a statement, the department said only that such approvals are "arms-length decisions made by Health Canada officials based on analysis by Health Canada scientists." There are about 100,000 abortions in Canada every year, most of them performed surgically in clinics or hospitals.
2More

Debate over access to abortion in Prince Edward Island intensifies - Infomart - 0 views

  • The Telegram (St. John's) Wed May 28 2014
  • The debate over abortion access in Prince Edward Island is intensifying after the provincial government rejected a proposal to have physicians come into the province to perform the procedure, a position that has frustrated abortion rights advocates. The National Abortion Federation, a Washington-based group that represents abortion providers, says it has found three doctors willing to travel to P.E.I. on a regular basis to perform abortions there. Federation president Vicki Saporta said the plan would save money in the long run for the province because the procedure would be done in a P.E.I. hospital rather than being contracted out to a hospital outside the province, which is now the case for P.E.I. women seeking publicly funded abortions. "It could be implemented in an existing facility with existing personnel, and just the doctor being able to come into the province," Saporta said Tuesday in an interview. But Premier Robert Ghiz has dismissed the idea. "Prince Edward Island is a small jurisdiction and we have a lot of our health-care services that are offered in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. Abortion services happens to be one of those," the Liberal premier said.
2More

Harper and the abortion debate - 0 views

  • 15 May 2014
  • NEW MARYLAND, N.B. - The prime minister says he has no plans to reopen the abortion debate after the Liberals asked Ottawa to intervene to determine whether New Brunswick's regulations governing access to the procedure violate the Canada Health Act.Stephen Harper says the administration of health care is within provincial jurisdiction.Harper made the remarks after an announcement in New Brunswick, where the issue of abortion access has flared up in recent weeks.The Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton is planning to close at the end of July, and three Liberal MPs say the province's refusal to fund the facility may not be in line with the Health Act's accessibility principle.The source of contention is a provincial regulation that requires women who want publicly funded abortions to have them done at two approved hospitals and only after they get approval from two doctors certifying it is medically necessary.Harper also said the Conservatives understand that Canadians have different views on abortion.The remarks were a shot at Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, who has taken a strong stance in favour of abortion rights, requiring potential candidates to support the party's position in any vote on the issue in the House of Commons.
2More

Abortion an issue too hot for PEI politicians; Neither party with a shot at government ... - 0 views

  • The Globe and Mail Mon Apr 27 2015
  • t was Feb. 20, 2014, and the medical director of Prince Edward Island's largest hospital was preparing to present a business case for abortion services to an independent medical advisory body for PEI, the only province in Canada where women still cannot get a surgical abortion. Then, Rosemary Henderson's phone rang: a call from Health PEI CEO Richard Wedge, telling her the health authority had been "explicitly told to cease work on the abortion project," Dr. Henderson wrote in an e-mail less than two weeks later. "I ignored that and took it to PMAC [the Provincial Medical Advisory Committee] anyway and have finished off my part of it and sent it up the chain. ... So it may die there." Dr. Henderson's prediction proved correct. The Liberal government of former premier Robert Ghiz killed the plan that she and a Health PEI-led working group had crafted for a twicemonthly abortion clinic at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Charlottetown, according to documents obtained under Freedom of Information laws.
3More

Brian Gallant softens Liberal stance on abortion policy - New Brunswick - CBC News - 0 views

  • Liberal leader calls for review of New Brunswick's restrictive abortion rules
  • Apr 11, 2014
  • Liberal Leader Brian Gallant has opened the door to changing his party’s long-standing policy on abortion after the Morgentaler clinic in Fredericton announced it will close. The Liberals have long supported the provincial policy of funding hospital abortions through medicare only if they're considered medically necessary and two doctors agree. Now, Gallant said that policy may be too restrictive. "I do think the two-doctor rule seems to be a barrier,” Gallant said. “I do think that there's a legal obligation from us to ensure access. That's why I've extended my hand to the premier, for us to deal with this in the next few months, when the clinic will close in July."
2More

New Brunswick premier to end restrictions on access to abortion services | The Council ... - 0 views

  • September 25, 2014
  • This past April the Council of Canadians Fredericton chapter participated in an emergency rally in response to the announcement by the Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton that said it would close in July because of New Brunswick's continued refusal to fund abortion care at the clinic. The clinic had been forced to charge patients directly for medically required services in contravention of the Canada Health Act because of the provincial government's refusal to fund these services. The Globe and Mail reports, "A regulation, brought in 25 years ago by a previous Liberal premier, Frank McKenna, requires that a woman get the approval of two doctors to receive a medically funded abortion. In addition, only two hospitals in the province perform the procedure – often forcing women to travel from their communities."
2More

Abortion debate blown wide open in N.B - Infomart - 0 views

  • National Post Thu Sep 18 2014
  • "It really brings an unpredictable variable to the last week of the campaign because issues that are personal to people, that are emotional could motivate them to go vote, whatever side of the issue they're on," said J.P. Lewis, an assistant professor of politics at the University of New Brunswick Saint John. The Liberals have an 11-point lead in the polls over the incumbent Conservatives, with 44.3% support Wednesday compared to the Conservatives 33.7%, according to poll aggregation site threehundredeight.com. Until recently, the campaign had been a "one note" affair focusing on shale gas extraction in the province by way of hydraulic fracking - the Conservative government sees it as the key to economic rebirth, while the Liberals would call a moratorium on fracking until more environmental assessment is done. Mr. Gallant was criticized by abortion- rights activists this year when he suggested much the same approach for abortion - a close study of barriers before discussion of repealing current regulations. "We're not against a study, we're just against any delay," said Wendy Robbins, past-president of the N.B. Women's Liberal Commission and current member of the N.B. Liberal party and advocate for greater abortion access. Mr. Gallant is being targeted with the issue because he's the front-runner, she said. The provincial New Democratic Party and the Greens say a repeal of the abortion regulation is the first thing they'd do if elected.
3More

Protesters slam health minister over inadequate abortion access - Local - The Journal P... - 0 views

  • May 09, 2014
  • More than 100 people took part in a rall at Province House today calling for more accessible abortion.  Health Minister Doug Currie may squirm slightly when grilled about his government’s policy on abortion, but he sure won’t budge.
  • Currie didn’t appear to relish standing on the noisy sidelines outside Province House Thursday as more than 100 people rallied in support of accessible abortion in P.E.I.
3More

Made to Look | Halifax Media Co-op - 0 views

  • A personal story about abortion access and after care on Prince Edward Island by Made to Look
  • From The Sovereign Uterus, an online space dedicated to publishing personal stories about abortion access and after care on Prince Edward Island, Canada.Prince Edward Island is the only province in Canada that does not provide local access to abortion services. Limited access to medical abortion is available but after care for both medical and surgical abortions is also limited and inconsistent.My story: I
  • was 16. Living at home with a single mom on welfare. Still in school. I
3More

NDP could trigger House debate on abortion later this week - Politics - CBC News - 1 views

  • Motion also targets government over funding for family planning and abortion access outside Canada
  • May 13, 2014
  • The federal New Democrats appear to be doubling down on their bid to put Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau on the spot over his party's position on abortion.
3More

Abortions performed on 49 P.E.I. women in N.B. since direct phone line launched - Princ... - 0 views

  • Island health officials announced toll-free line for abortion appointments at the Moncton Hospital in July
  • Dec 15, 2015
  • In the past five months, 49 P.E.I. women accessed abortion services in Moncton, CBC News has learned.
2More

Morgentaler abortion clinic in Fredericton to close - New Brunswick - CBC News - 0 views

  • Fredericton clinic says it cannot afford to continue performing abortions without provincial funding
  • Apr 10, 2014
3More

Publicly funded abortion services in N.B. will only expand to Moncton City Hospital | r... - 0 views

  • February 26, 2015
  • By Tracy Glynn
  • Publicly funded abortion services in New Brunswick will only be expanding to the Moncton City Hospital, according to an email sent from Horizon Health Network President and CEO John McGarry to a number of doctors on Jan. 21.
2More

Abortion access issue could affect election outcome - Infomart - 0 views

  • Times & Transcript (Moncton) Wed Aug 6 2014
  • FREDERICTON * Debate over abortion services may not be the biggest issue this election but it could play a role in driving turnout on election day, says a veteran political observer. "This may not be a way to grow support, but a way of firming it up and getting them out to the polls," said Geoff Martin, a professor of political science at Mount Allison university. Martin questions how much pull the issue will ultimately have on an electorate also weighing economic development, forestry policy, and hydraulic fracturing but it says it will be a deciding issue for some. "I've even talked to a couple of them who have said this is a big issue for them. Maybe this will be a turnout issue." Access to abortion services has been a smouldering issue in New Brunswick for years, but it was suddenly reignited in April when the Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton announced it would close its doors. Managers said the closure was due to a lack of government funding. That led to immediate calls for the New Brunswick government to eliminate Regulation 84-20.
2More

Ten reasons why the closure of Morgentaler Clinic matters | rabble.ca - 0 views

  • By Kaitlin McNabb | April 11, 2014
  • The Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton, New Brunswick has announced it will close its doors in July, striking a huge blow to reproductive choice in Canada. The clinic opened in June 1994 with the mandate to provide access to safe abortion care and "that no woman would be turned away regardless of [their] ability to pay." Since its opening, the clinic has provided abortion services to more than 10,000 women.
1 - 20 of 36 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page