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Home Abortions Made Easier As Law Relaxed During Coronavirus Outbreak

Health Secretary Matt Hancock announces to MPs in the House of Commons, London, that 53 people in the UK have now died after testing positive for the coronavirus.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock announces to MPs in the House of Commons, London, that 53 people in the UK have now died after testing positive for the coronavirus.

Updated: Read the latest developments on the coronavirus outbreak here.

Home abortions in England, Scotland and Wales are to be made easier during the coronavirus outbreak, the Department of Health has confirmed.

Under a temporary relaxation of the law, the two pills needed to terminate a pregnancy can now be prescribed after an online or phone consultation with a doctor, removing the previous requirement to attend a hospital or clinic in person.

The decision, which is a U-turn on advice issued just a week ago, was warmly welcomed by medical professionals and women’s rights groups who had warned that the national “lockdown” had made it difficult for abortion services to continue.

Over the next 13 weeks, it is estimated that 44,000 women in England and Wales are likely to need access to an early medical abortion.

A total of 13 different organisations – including the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG), the Royal College of Midwives and the British Advisory Pregnancy Service (BPAS) – had written to health secretary Matt Hancock to urge him to liberalise the law.

As revealed by HuffPost UK last week, officials in the Department of Health had sent out an email and updated its website to signal a change in the law, but within hours that was withdrawn and Hancock had said there were no plans for a new policy.

However, on Monday, the department changed tack again to announce the shift towards a “temporary” liberalisation.

“Public safety and continued access to key services is our priority during this difficult period. We are updating our guidance so women who need an abortion up to 10 weeks and can’t access a clinic can use abortion pills at home,” a spokesperson said.

The change means that women can be prescribed and take at home both pills – mifepristone and misoprostol – needed for a medical abortion up to 10 weeks of pregnancy.

Labour MP Stella Creasy told HuffPost UK: “The secretary of state has made the right call reversing...

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