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Why do women present late for induced abortion?

Why do women present late for induced abortion?
Why do women present late for induced abortion?
This article summarises the findings of studies relating to why women present for abortion at gestations of more than 12 weeks. Its primary focus is on British experience, but relevant studies from other countries are described. Key findings reveal that there are many different reasons. Much of the delay occurs prior to women requesting an abortion; other key issues include women's concerns about what is involved in having the abortion and aspects of relationships with their partners and/or parents. Further, after requesting an abortion, delays are partly ‘service-related’ – for example, waiting for appointments – and partly ‘woman-related’ for example, missing or cancelling appointments. The relative contributions to the delay of these various factors are discussed. The implications of the research for abortion education and service provision are considered. Abortion for reasons linked to foetal abnormality is not covered in this article.

abortion, second trimester, delay
1521-6934
479-489
Lee, Ellie
f8cddd16-3094-4e1f-ac38-eba17c72cb4a
Ingham, Roger
e3f11583-dc06-474f-9b36-4536dc3f7b99
Lee, Ellie
f8cddd16-3094-4e1f-ac38-eba17c72cb4a
Ingham, Roger
e3f11583-dc06-474f-9b36-4536dc3f7b99

Lee, Ellie and Ingham, Roger (2010) Why do women present late for induced abortion? Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 24 (4), 479-489. (doi:10.1016/j.bpobgyn.2010.02.005). (PMID:20338814)

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article summarises the findings of studies relating to why women present for abortion at gestations of more than 12 weeks. Its primary focus is on British experience, but relevant studies from other countries are described. Key findings reveal that there are many different reasons. Much of the delay occurs prior to women requesting an abortion; other key issues include women's concerns about what is involved in having the abortion and aspects of relationships with their partners and/or parents. Further, after requesting an abortion, delays are partly ‘service-related’ – for example, waiting for appointments – and partly ‘woman-related’ for example, missing or cancelling appointments. The relative contributions to the delay of these various factors are discussed. The implications of the research for abortion education and service provision are considered. Abortion for reasons linked to foetal abnormality is not covered in this article.

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More information

Published date: 3 August 2010
Keywords: abortion, second trimester, delay

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 181285
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/181285
ISSN: 1521-6934
PURE UUID: 91e82c2e-b5c8-457b-9647-efb00462d6de

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Date deposited: 14 Apr 2011 15:13
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:55

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Contributors

Author: Ellie Lee
Author: Roger Ingham

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