Health minister presses on with abortion pill plans, despite Christian opposition
Health June 27, 2016 Photo: Regering.nl Photo: Regering.nl A pill which
triggers miscarriage in the very early stages of pregnancy should be
available via family doctors, health minister Edith Schippers has told
parliament. The minister plans to introduce legislation which will allow
GPs to prescribe the pill at the end of the year, according to the
Volkskrant on Monday. The pill, named Sunmedabon, is currently only
available in hospitals and abortion clinics. Women are often more
comfortable approaching their own doctor so this will make it easier for
them to request the pill early, Schippers said in her briefing to
parliament. ‘In addition, family doctors play an important role in
prescribing contraception, so preventing further unwanted pregnancies
after an abortion,’ she said. The pill should have been made available
via family doctors last year but MPs from the small Christian parties
have so far refused to back the measure and their support is crucial in
the upper house of parliament. The anti-immigration PVV, the Socialist
Party and the Christian Democrats also have their doubts about the plan,
the Volkskrant said. Limits Although the pill can be used up to nine
weeks into a pregnancy, experts say doctors should be limited to
prescribing the pill up to six weeks and two days – or when women are
two weeks late with their period. Doctors will have to report all
prescriptions to the health ministry inspectorate. There are some 30,300
abortions in the Netherlands a year, and over half take place in the
first seven weeks of pregnancy. The Netherlands has one of the lowest
abortion rates in the world, at 8.5 per 1,000 women.
Read more at DutchNews.nl: Health minister presses on with abortion pill plans, despite Christian opposition http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2016/06/92531-2/
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