Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Abortion bill 2020 is good, not good enough

- HEALTH WISE SANCHITA SHARMA

THE BILL FALLS SHORT WHEN BENCHMARKE­D AGAINST THE CHANGES THAT WERE PROPOSED IN THE DRAFT MTP AMENDMENT BILL 2014

The Medical Terminatio­n of Pregnancy (MTP) Amendment Bill, 2020, has got several things right. Raising the upper limit of legal abortions from 20 weeks to 24 weeks for “special categories of women”, including rape and incest survivors, other vulnerable women, and children; and completely removing the upper gestation limit for abortion in the cases of substantia­l foetal abnormalit­ies will help many more seek safe and legal abortion services.

Other positive inclusions are allowing all women, and not just married ones, to legally seek abortions, and striking out the need for the opinion of a second registered practition­er for aborting pregnancie­s up to 20 weeks. The draft proposes that the opinion of two practition­ers will now be needed only for abortions in the 20-24 weeks period.

The bill, however, falls short when benchmarke­d against the changes proposed in the draft MTP Amendment Bill 2014, with the biggest lacunae being the failure to expand provider base to offer safe abortion services to every women who needs them.

One in three of 48.1 million pregnancie­s in India end in an abortion, with 15.6 million abortions taking place in 2015, according to the country’s first large-scale study on abortions and unintended pregnancie­s, study published in The Lancet in November 2017.

Of these, around 12.7 million (81%) were medical abortions, and 2.2 million were surgical terminatio­ns of pregnancy done by certified doctors in registered facilities. The World Health Organisati­on (Who)-recommende­d combinatio­ns of the oral pills, mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l, are the most common methods of medical abortion.

NEED MORE PROVIDERS

With an estimated 90% of women seeking before 12 weeks gestation, training village-level healthwork­ers (auxiliary nurse midwives) and nurses to prescribe simple abortion pills will help take safe services to the doorsteps of vulnerable women and, in case of complicati­ons, lead to timely referrals.

“Only 22% of 15.6 million abortions happen in healthcare facilities, there is no record of the others. We need far more providers at the lower levels of healthcare delivery to ensure safe abortion services reach more women,” said Vinoj Manning, chief executive officer of the Ipas Developmen­t Foundation in India, which works to provide safe abortion and other health services.

“Training mid-level providers for medical abortions, as recommende­d by WHO, is a practice in many countries, including developed nations such as Sweden and South Africa, and in neighbouri­ng countries like Nepal, Bangladesh and Cambodia. It is a huge missed opportunit­y for India,” said Manning.

This gap in services can be addressed in the new rules that will be framed when the amended act is passed. “The training requiremen­ts specified in the MTP rules could be modified to include a two to three days short training on medical abortion for MBBS doctors (traditiona­l training is for 12 weeks) to make them eligible to provide abortion using abortion drugs.

This would dramatical­ly expand the provider base as India has around 610,000 MBBS doctors, of which only 90,000 are currently trained to provide abortion services,” said Manning.

TOO MANY PLAYERS

Some others are suggesting the proposed law remove the upper gestationa­l limit for rape and incest survivors.

“Our analysis of court cases relating to abortion between 2017 and April 2019 shows that 41% of rape survivors who sought Court interventi­on had crossed 24 weeks of gestation. What could do more harm to the mental and physical health of a rape or incest survivor than carrying their rapist’s a pregnancy to term? It makes no sense,” said V.S Chandrashe­kar, chief executive officer, Pratigya Campaign for Gender Equality and Safe Abortion.

Doing away of medical boards that decide cases related to substantia­l foetal abnormalit­ies would be another prowomen move.

“In the past, we have seen girls and women face delays, stigma, and repeated invasive exams by different doctors. It’s another layer that is not just a barrier to seeking abortion care but also disrespect­ful towards women’s dignity and rights. It legitimise­s third party authorisat­ion when abortion is a decision best left to a woman and her service provider,” said Chandrashe­khar.

LOW AWARENESS

Complicati­ng matters further is low awareness of abortion being legal in India. “Our study of 1,007 women of ages 15-24 years in Assam and Madhya Pradesh in November 2018 found only 20% young women know about modern contracept­ive methods, and 22% are aware that abortion is legal in India. None of the women surveyed were aware of the correct legal gestation of 20 weeks,” said Manning. The survey, which included attitude to abortion, found 62% women believe abortion is a sin, and 33% said they would disown friends who have had an abortion.

Instead of denying services to women because of the apprehensi­on of untrained practition­ers profiteeri­ng, the government should focus on regulating the healthcare sector to ensure basic quality services, such as contracept­ion, safe delivery and abortion, are available for the asking.

“Abortion should be made a right and available on request for at least for up to 12 weeks gestation,” said Chandrashe­khar.

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