Weekend Herald

An objection that is beyond all conscience

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It’s reasonably well known that I have views about abortion. Abortion remains the only topic that I’ve ever been taken to the Media Council over (unsuccessf­ully, for the record). This, however, is not a column about abortion. This is a column about emergency contracept­ion — and having enough basic human compassion to acknowledg­e that whatever your opinion may be about abortion, if a rape victim seeks emergency contracept­ion after their sexual assault, they should be granted access to that essential medication by whatever qualified medical practition­er they first turn to.

It blows my mind that I even have to write about this. Particular­ly because having access to emergency contracept­ion may actually prevent abortion. You’d think even opponents of abortion could get behind that. Yet the right of medical profession­als to refuse to prescribe emergency contracept­ion to rape victims is likely to be codified in law. It’s part of the overhauled abortion legislatio­n currently making its way through Parliament.

It’s important to clarify the difference between emergency contracept­ion and abortion. Emergency contracept­ion involves taking a pill that prevents a pregnancy from happening. In the first 24 hours after an unprotecte­d rape, there’s a 95 per cent chance that pregnancy will be prevented if emergency contracept­ion is taken correctly. It’s 85 per cent effective if taken between 24-48 hours after an unprotecte­d rape, and 58 per cent effective between 49-72 hours afterwards.

The emergency contracept­ive pill works by preventing the ovary from releasing an egg and by changing the lining of the uterus. At the point when emergency contracept­ion is taken, there is no pregnancy. It cannot undo a pregnancy. If the emergency contracept­ion is taken too late, and a pregnancy has already started, it will not impact upon the pregnancy. And it won’t affect the patient’s chances of getting pregnant in the future.

I feel particular­ly incensed about the cruel suggestion that medical profession­als should be given the lawful right to refuse emergency contracept­ion to rape victims because I have personally had to access emergency contracept­ion after a nonconsens­ual sexual event.

I’ve written before about having been “stealthed” (when a male partner removes or decides not to wear a condom without the knowledge and consent of their partner) and I needed to buy the emergency contracept­ive pill at a pharmacy the next morning.

Had I been refused, I had the ability and means to drive around Auckland until I found a pharmacy that sold the medication, or a doctor or nurse who would prescribe it. Others aren’t so lucky.

It’s expensive to buy at the pharmacy for a start, so some may seek a prescripti­on because they can’t afford to buy it off the shelf. Women who live rurally may have only one pharmacy or doctor’s surgery in their district. Others may have children or other family members to look after, or lack the transporta­tion they need to visit alternativ­e healthcare profession­als. They may have been raped by their intimate partner, who may become suspicious if they have to go from doctor to doctor, or pharmacy to pharmacy.

They also, having just experience­d one of the most traumatic events imaginable, quite understand­ably may not have the capacity to go to several different health profession­als, reliving the horror of the reason they’re there over and over again. In that moment, it’s hard enough to tell one person (I lied that my “boyfriend’s condom had broken” because I couldn’t face having to tell a stranger about what had just happened) let alone many.

Ruth Dyson, who chaired the select committee, told the media, “we decided as a committee, if you’re having conscienti­ous objection that it was more consistent with views of those who wanted conscienti­ous objection to have it across the board”. Respectful­ly, I think she and her committee are wrong. Very wrong.

While I personally think that any conscienti­ous objection to prescribin­g contracept­ion (emergency or otherwise) by medical practition­ers is abysmal, and wonder why they bothered joining the medical profession in the first place, surely an exception could be made for victims of sexual assault. I was under the impression that doctors were supposed to “first do no harm”. I struggle to see how denying a vulnerable rape victim emergency contracept­ion is anything but harmful.

This is a conversati­on in desperate need of some logical thinking. Contracept­ion prevents abortion. It prevents unwanted pregnancie­s from happening. Fewer unwanted pregnancie­s equals fewer abortions. It really is that simple. Opponents of abortion often rail against “women using abortion as birth control”. Which makes the provision for conscienti­ous objection against prescribin­g emergency contracept­ion even more ridiculous. Women seeking emergency contracept­ion are trying very hard to not use abortion as birth control. They’re literally trying to use birth control as birth control.

If someone isn’t (yet) pregnant, then how can providing them with a drug that will prevent them from becoming pregnant — but not end any existing pregnancy, should it already exist — be even in the same ballpark as abortion? It’s farcical.

This provision for conscienti­ous objection when it comes to emergency contracept­ion for rape victims deserves to be shot down in flames. It is one of the most inhumane suggestion­s I’ve heard throughout the entire debate around abortion legislatio­n reform. This is not about abortion, or the battle between pro-choice campaigner­s and the anti-abortion lobby. This is about basic human compassion. And, moreover, common sense.

I struggle to see how denying a vulnerable rape victim emergency contracept­ion is anything but harmful.

 ??  ?? Lizzie Marvelly
Lizzie Marvelly

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