www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Kem6eSqip
https://books.google.ca/books/about/The_Complete_Murdoch_Mysteries_Collectio.html?id=QfEJAQAAQBAJ
Abstract
This
review describes some of the key features in the history of termination
of pregnancy within our society. The frame work of the law regulating
termination of pregnancy in the United Kingdom is presented. An overview
is given of the different methods that are used. The review ends with
some reflection on possible future developments in the provision of
Termination of Pregnancy services within the United Kingdom.
Keywords
- abortion;
- foeticide;
- mifepristone;
- misoprostol;
- MVA;
- termination of pregnancy
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
https://peiacsw.wordpress.com/2015/05/22/open-letter-from-the-pei-abortion-rights-network/
http://www.theglobeandmail. com/news/national/why-nbs- english-hospitals-limited-new- abortion-services-to-moncton/ article24554165/
New Brunswick fell just shy of fulfilling commitment to expand abortion
access, documents reveal
KELLY GRANT
21 May 2015
When a group of New Brunswick doctors and hospital executives met at the
Amsterdam Inn in Sussex in January, they had before them detailed proposals
for hospital-based abortion clinics in the Maritime province’s three major
cities.
But rather than significantly expand geographic access to surgical
abortions, the chief executive officer of New Brunswick’s English-language
hospital network decided two days later to limit the new service to
Moncton, one of only two cities that already offered publicly funded
pregnancy terminations.
…..
“I will even add an eighth reason that is only sitting in the back of my
head,” Mr. McGarry, the CEO of Horizon Health Network, wrote. “SJ [Saint
John] is a very significant Irish Catholic community and it was quite a
surprise to me that the hospital physicians would even entertain the
matter. Times have changed of course. But it was a thought that lingered in
my head.”
Mr. McGarry’s Jan. 21 e-mail is one of nearly 200 documents obtained by The
Globe and Mail through the province’s Right to Information and Protection
of Privacy Act that reveal for the first time how close New Brunswick came
to dramatically expanding abortion services earlier this year.
Instead, pro-choice women say, the province’s Liberal government has fallen
short of its commitment to increase options on the ground, despite
dramatically loosening the regulations that once made New Brunswick one of
the hardest places in Canada to end a pregnancy.
PEI post-abortion healthcare denied in ER
https://peiacsw.wordpress.com/2015/05/22/open-letter-from-the-pei-abortion-rights-network/
http://www.theglobeandmail.
New Brunswick fell just shy of fulfilling commitment to expand abortion
access, documents reveal
KELLY GRANT
21 May 2015
When a group of New Brunswick doctors and hospital executives met at the
Amsterdam Inn in Sussex in January, they had before them detailed proposals
for hospital-based abortion clinics in the Maritime province’s three major
cities.
But rather than significantly expand geographic access to surgical
abortions, the chief executive officer of New Brunswick’s English-language
hospital network decided two days later to limit the new service to
Moncton, one of only two cities that already offered publicly funded
pregnancy terminations.
…..
“I will even add an eighth reason that is only sitting in the back of my
head,” Mr. McGarry, the CEO of Horizon Health Network, wrote. “SJ [Saint
John] is a very significant Irish Catholic community and it was quite a
surprise to me that the hospital physicians would even entertain the
matter. Times have changed of course. But it was a thought that lingered in
my head.”
Mr. McGarry’s Jan. 21 e-mail is one of nearly 200 documents obtained by The
Globe and Mail through the province’s Right to Information and Protection
of Privacy Act that reveal for the first time how close New Brunswick came
to dramatically expanding abortion services earlier this year.
Instead, pro-choice women say, the province’s Liberal government has fallen
short of its commitment to increase options on the ground, despite
dramatically loosening the regulations that once made New Brunswick one of
the hardest places in Canada to end a pregnancy.