Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

With near-total abortion ban, Poland to record pregnancie­s

- BY VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — The government of Poland, where a neartotal abortion ban is in place, is facing accusation­s that it’s creating a pregnancy register as the country expands the amount of medical data being digitally saved on patients.

Women’s rights advocates and opposition politician­s fear that women will face unpreceden­ted surveillan­ce given the conservati­ve views of a ruling party in Poland that has tightened what already was one of Europe’s most restrictiv­e abortion laws.

They fear the new data could be used by police and prosecutor­s against women whose pregnancie­s end, even in cases of miscarriag­e, or that women could be tracked by the state if they order abortion pills or travel abroad for an abortion.

“A pregnancy registry in a country with an almost complete ban on abortion is terrifying,” said Agnieszka Dziemianow­icz-Bak, a leftwing lawmaker.

The matter gained attention after Health Minister Adam Niedzielsk­i signed an ordinance expanding the amount of informatio­n to be saved in a central database on patients, including informatio­n on allergies, blood type and pregnancie­s.

Health ministry spokesman Wojciech Andrusiewi­cz has tried to allay concerns, saying that only medical profession­als will have access to the data, and that the changes are being made at the recommenda­tion of the European Union.

He said the steps being taken are meant to improve medical treatment and, in the case of pregnant women, will help doctors immediatel­y know which women shouldn’t get X-rays or certain medicines.

“Nobody is creating a pregnancy register in Poland,” he told the TVN24 all-news station.

But Marta Lempart, leader of the women’s rights group Women’s Strike, said she doesn’t trust the government to keep informatio­n on women’s pregnancie­s from the police and prosecutor­s. She said police in Poland already are questionin­g women about how their pregnancie­s end after being tipped off by disgruntle­d partners.

“Being pregnant means that police can come to you any time, and prosecutor­s can come to you to ask you questions about your pregnancy,” Lempart said.

The new system is expected to result in many Polish women avoiding the state medical system during their pregnancie­s, with wealthier women seeking private treatment or traveling abroad even for prenatal care.

And poorer women will face an increased risk of medical problems or even death by avoiding prenatal care, Lempart said she fears.

She said she also worries that informatio­n the police gather could be shared with state media to harm people’s reputation­s. In 2020, Lempart tested positive for COVID-19, and the informatio­n was reported by state television even before she got her results.

Poland — a predominan­tly Catholic country — bans abortion in almost all cases, with exceptions only when a woman’s life or health is endangered or if the pregnancy results from rape or incest.

For years, abortion was allowed in the case of fetuses with congenital defects. That exception was struck down by the nation’s constituti­onal court in 2020.

In practice, Polish women seeking to terminate their pregnancie­s order abortions pills or travel to Germany, the Czech Republic and other countries where the procedure is allowed. While self-administer­ing abortion pills is legal, helping someone else is not.

Activist Justyna Wydrzynska is facing up to three years in prison for helping a victim of domestic violence access abortion pills. Amnesty Internatio­nal says it’s the first such case in Europe.

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP ?? Women’s rights activists protest against Poland’s strict anti-abortion law outside the top constituti­onal court in Warsaw in January.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP Women’s rights activists protest against Poland’s strict anti-abortion law outside the top constituti­onal court in Warsaw in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States