Toronto Star

Saskatchew­an moves to improve access to abortion

Province offering billing code for physicians who prescribe Mifegymiso pill

- MICKEY DJURIC

REGINA—Saskatchew­an became the last province in Canada to bring in universal coverage for the abortion pill and two years later the province is finally paying doctors who provide it.

On Oct. 1, the province started offering a billing code for physicians who offer Mifegymiso, which terminates early pregnancy up to nine weeks.

Previously, only doctors who performed surgical abortions were directly compensate­d, but those who prescribed the pill had to bill it as counsellin­g or a consultati­on, which deterred them from taking on work that could require hours.

“Now that it can be billed properly, and physicians can be compensate­d for the amount of time that it takes, we’re hoping it will increase the number of physicians all over the province who are willing to offer that service to patients who need it,” said Dr. Carla Holinaty, a family doctor based in Saskatoon.

She said the goal is to make it easier for women who want to end their pregnancie­s, especially for those living in rural or remote areas.

Holinaty said sometimes patients have to travel a great distance to an urban centre to get a prescripti­on for the pill, often taking a day or two off work and incurring travel, child-care and accommodat­ion expenses.

“It makes it almost impossible for some women to be able to access terminatio­n of pregnancy if that’s what they want.”

Other challenges still exist for women who need to access sexual and reproducti­ve health services in Saskatchew­an.

“Even before the pandemic, informatio­n on how to obtain services was often shrouded in secrecy and shame in the province and there was already a critical lack of care providers ... able to provide abortions,” said Heather Hale, executive director of the Saskatoon Sexual Health clinic.

Surgical abortions are only available in Saskatoon and Regina, so there’s a geographic barrier for women who live elsewhere, which is exacerbate­d by the lack of transporta­tion options, said Hale.

“That means if you have money in your bank account, sure you have access to abortion. But if you don’t, then good luck,” said Frédérique Chabot, director of health promotion at Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights.

And surgical abortion access remains inconsiste­nt. In Regina, surgical abortions are performed up to 18 weeks and six days, and no doctor’s referral is needed. In Saskatoon, women can get an abortion up to 12 weeks but need a doctor’s referral.

“That extra step of having to get a referral contribute­s to individual­s struggling to meet that timeline,” Hale said, adding that women who don’t meet the timelines must travel out of province and bear the expenses.

“Sexual health is stigmatize­d, wildly stigmatize­d, and that often means its de-prioritize­d in health systems, and by government­s and funding bodies,” Chabot said.

Sexual and reproducti­ve health has become undervalue­d even more during the pandemic, she said.

As Saskatchew­an deals with record COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations, it has reduced services at its hospital-run Women’s Health Centre in Regina and at sexual health clinics.

A spokespers­on for the Saskatchew­an Health Authority would not disclose what services are being reduced but did say surgical abortions continue to be a priority.

“When there’s a public health crisis like COVID-19, sexual and reproducti­ve health needs don’t go away, they often get

more urgent,” Chabot said.

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