Friday, August 9, 2019

Legal abortion restrictions

As of 1998, among the 152 most populous countries, 54 either banned abortion entirely or permitted it only to save the life of the pregnant woman.

On the other hand as of 1998, 49 of the 152 most populous countries allowed abortion without restriction as to reason, but 44 of these required specific justification after a particular gestational age: 12 weeks (Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France, Georgia, Greece, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Rep., Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Mongolia, Norway, Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Ukraine, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan) 13 weeks (Italy) 14 weeks (Austria, Cambodia, Germany, Hungary, Romania and Spain) 18 weeks (Sweden) 22 weeks (North Macedonia) 24 weeks (Singapore) viability (Netherlands and to some extent the United States) no limit (Canada, some states in the United States, China, and North Korea)

As of 2011 among those countries that allowed abortion without restriction as to reason, the gestational limits for such abortions on request were: 37 countries set a gestational limit of 12 weeks, 7 countries of 14 weeks, 4 did not set limits, 3 at viability, 3 at 10 weeks, one at 90 days, one at 8 weeks, one at 18 weeks, and one at 24 weeks. In addition, Abortion in Australia, and, to a certain extent, Abortion in the United States, is regulated at state/territory level, and laws vary by region.

In these countries, abortions after the general gestational age limit are allowed only under restricted circumstances, which include, depending on country, risk to the woman's life, physical or mental health, fetal malformation, cases where the pregnancy was the result of rape, or poor socio-economic conditions.

For instance, in Italy, abortion is allowed on request up until 90 days, after which it is allowed only if the pregnancy or childbirth pose a threat to the woman’s life, a risk to physical health of the woman, a risk to mental health of the woman; if there is a risk of fetal malformation; or if the pregnancy is the result of rape or other sexual crime. Denmark provides a wider range of reasons, including social and economic ones, which can be invoked by a woman who seeks an abortion after 12 weeks.

Abortions at such stages must in general be approved by a doctor or a special committee, unlike early abortions which are performed on demand. The ease with which the doctor or the committee allows a late term abortion varies significantly by country, and is often influenced by the social and religious views prevalent in that region. Some countries, like Canada, China (Mainland only) and Vietnam have no legal limit on when an abortion can be performed

Abortion clinic https://www.abortionsclinic.co.za
Abortion pills https://www.abortionsclinic.co.za/abortion-pills.html
Surgical abortion https://www.abortionsclinic.co.za/surgical-abortion.html
Womb cleaning https://www.abortionsclinic.co.za/womb-cleaning.html
Pregnancy termination pills https://www.abortionsclinic.co.za/pregnancy-termination.html

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.