‘Imagine if we had an actual service ...’: a qualitative exploration of abortion access challenges in Australian rural primary care
Noonan A, Millar E, Tomnay JE, Luscombe GM, Black KI.
Published 5 November 2024 Australasia
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Abortion is not routinely funded, provided or monitored by Australia’s public health system. Less than 10% of GPs in 2021 had undertaken the mandatory training to prescribe for medical abortion and most procedural abortion services are delivered by independent providers at considerable out-of-pocket cost to the consumer. GPs that are conscientious objectors to providing abortion services are legally obliged to refer to other available services but, for rural GPs, the absence of feasible referral pathways means this obligation can easily remain unfulfilled. This Original Research study investigates the experiences of rural primary care providers who become the ‘first point of contact’ for women with unintended pregnancy and, irrespective of their knowledge, interest or expertise in abortion provision, are charged with the task of ensuring abortion-seekers reach the services they need.