PARLIAMENTARY WRITTEN QUESTION
Abortion (30 January 2019)

Question Asked

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, how many abortions have been declined as a result of a suspicion of coercion in each of the last five years.

Asked by:
Sir Edward Leigh (Conservative)

Answer

Data on the number of abortions declined as a result of a suspicion of coercion is not collected centrally.

The Department has no current plans to commission a review of reproductive coercion.

The Department takes this issue very seriously. The Department’s required standard operating procedures (RSOPs) for independent sector abortion providers and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists clinical guideline on the Care of Women Requesting Induced Abortion, specify that careful and sensitive enquiry as to the reasons for requesting an abortion should be made, with the opportunity for further discussion, especially where women express any doubts or there may be a suggestion of pressure or coercion. The Care Quality Commission inspects independent sector abortion providers against all of the Department’s RSOPs including looking at the procedures and policies services have in place to ensure that all women and young persons are seeking abortion voluntarily.


Answered by:
Dame Jackie Doyle-Price (Conservative)
6 February 2019

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