Saturday Star

SMS platform set to ensure safe abortions for SA’s women

-

legal abortions through an SMS platform.

The user sends the word FEM to 30816, and after answering a few questions on the platform, they then receive a referral SMS to a legal and safe health facility that provides abortions nearby.

The initiative, which was launched last week, was cre- ated by safe2choos­e, a social enterprise which is part of an internatio­nal movement for reproducti­ve justice and access to safe abortion.

“Young women go to these illegal places while the government has clinics that provide abortion,” explains Mathizerd, the associate programme officer at FEM.

FEM has six clinics and hospitals which its team recommends to users around Gauteng. “We’ve personally verified the government facilities that we recommend.

“We’ve visited about 13 service providers while others did not meet our health standards and security needs.

“Our focus is on quality, not the numbers of clinics.”

To expand the initiative’s reach, more clinics and hospitals will be verified in the next two weeks “to service more of the province”.

It’s crucial that an abortion is carried out “at the right time, at the right facility, by the right people”.

Dignity is vital. “We link the users with infor mation that also includes whom they should go to when they get to the facility. One should not arrive at a clinic and explain at reception what they are there for and then stand in a queue with others who may be there for abortions. There isn’t dignity in that.”

Research carried out by Ipas, a global non-profit organisati­on which opposes unsafe abortions, revealed how 30% of South African women are not aware that abortion is legal, while half of all abortions are performed illegally in unsafe environmen­ts.

“Unsafe abortions have a massive impact on young women – the members of lo- cal society most impacted by poverty and unemployme­nt,” said Mathizerd.

This, she explains, is the main reason the initiative uses an SMS service. The pilot phase began in Gauteng, and will gradually roll out to other provinces.

“We’re hoping this initiative closes the gap by providing vital informatio­n to South Africans most in need. The message is simple: if you need help or access to informatio­n, you just have to send an SMS.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa