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Mural of Savita Halappanavar. The mural was put up by artist Aches on a white wall on Richmond Street South in Dublin city on the eve of the Eighth Amendment referendum. Rolling News

Opinion Every woman needs access to reproductive healthcare over the course of her life

On the launch of its new ‘Every Woman’ report into healthcare, National Women’s Council Director Orla O’Connor looks at the challenges that still remain.

THE PAST NUMBER of years have been transformative for women’s healthcare in Ireland. Abortion is now available here at home.

Budget 2023 has paved the way for a further roll out of the free contraception scheme.

And there are efforts underway to transform the sex education programme into a modern-day curriculum which responds to the challenges faced by young people.

While we have much to celebrate, it will be crucial now that we build on these achievements. As we mark the 10th anniversary of Savita Halappanavar’s death this Friday, we must follow through on our commitment to develop and invest in a truly holistic healthcare model for women that responds to their diverse needs.

It starts with education

Every woman will need access to reproductive healthcare over the course of her lifespan. This should begin with comprehensive sex and relationship education.

Right now, Ireland’s sex education model is being reviewed, with the new Junior Cycle curriculum due for rollout in September 2023.

Without adequate sex education, responsive to the needs and curiosity of children and teenagers, a void is developing which is all too easily filled by pornography, social media, and other potentially toxic sources of information.

We must provide our children with information that will help them develop healthy attitudes to sex, relationships, and their bodies. It’s vital they learn about harmful gender stereotypes, how to recognise coercive control and intimate partner abuse, and about the diversity of bodies they are likely to come across in their lifetimes.

It is only by addressing head-on the misogynistic beliefs underlying sexual exploitation, domestic abuse, and violence against women that we will have a society that is safe for women and girls.

A new phase of care

Learning about healthy sex and relationships early on will help women to make key decisions about their reproductive lives. One of the most central and personal decisions a woman will ever make is if or when to have children. This decision goes to the core of her autonomy and agency in her own life.

It stands to reason that better access to contraception will mitigate the risk of an unwanted pregnancy.

It has been really positive to see the move towards universal free contraception, which includes the most effective forms such as the coil and implants. The scheme must now be extended so women of all ages can benefit. Key to making the scheme accessible to all women will be easy-to-implement changes, such as phone consultations and pharmacist prescribing for oral contraceptives.

But crisis pregnancies will still happen, and as a society, we must provide for women and girls who find themselves in this situation.

The repeal referendum of 2018 was a generation-defining vote, and women have been living in a new era of healthcare since abortion was introduced in 2019. But no other healthcare procedure has been the subject of a public vote, no other procedure continues to be so tightly regulated, and no other procedure carries a potential jail sentence for medical professionals.

Healthcare and the law

Research we carried out earlier this year found that 71% of Irish people agree abortion should be treated like any other medical procedure and should not be a matter of criminal law. And yet, carrying out an abortion after the current legal limit of 12 weeks has the potential to make criminals of the medical professionals who are looking after us.

It means that women in the most heartbreaking of situations, such as those who discover their child may not live long after birth, are denied one of their options in a time of great need.

The World Health Organization has been very clear in recommending that abortion should never be criminalised. It also recommends against a number of restrictions in Ireland’s abortion law, such as the mandatory three-day wait and the cut-off after 12 weeks. It recommends instead that abortion should be available at the request of the woman or pregnant person who needs it. At the National Women’s Council we strongly support this view, because the person who needs an abortion is always the person who is best placed to make these key decisions about her life.

It’s clear that we’ve come a long way to providing holistic reproductive healthcare to women during their lifespans. But it’s also clear we still have a long way to go to make sure that every woman is equipped with the knowledge, the tools, and the healthcare she will need during her reproductive years.

Now is our moment to continue redressing years of secrecy and shame on sexuality and sexual and reproductive health, and to ensure all women and girls have the freedom to make decisions regarding their bodies and lives.

Orla O’Connor is Director of the National Women’s Council (NWC) which is launching its new report Every Woman today.

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    Mute Sheila Murphy
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    Feb 17th 2012, 5:46 PM

    This is a fabulous story; In school we learnt about Edward Jenner/Brunel/Stevenson etc (who indeed were extremely important) but why are we never taught about the advances made by Irish people whether it happened at home or abroad. If we knew more about the innovation and creativity that was driven by them, it might make us a more entrepreneurial people, and not so dependent on others to come in and fill that gap.

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    Mute jrbmc
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    Feb 17th 2012, 10:57 PM

    Why is there not a museum in this country dedicated to these people?

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    Mute Mick Walsh
    Favourite Mick Walsh
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    Feb 17th 2012, 6:22 PM

    Not on the list but:

    Parsons Family (Birr Co. Offaly) – Giant Telescopes and the steam turbine (although C.A. Parsons was born in London)

    Robert Boyle (Lismore, Co. Waterford) – noted for investigating the relationship between pressure and volume of a gas: hence Boyle’s Law (P inversely proportional to V)

    George Boole (UCC, Cork – born in England) – his abstract form of algebra, later refined, forms the mathematical basis of the modern electronic circuit.

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    Mute Carfit Blakemotoring
    Favourite Carfit Blakemotoring
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    Feb 18th 2012, 2:12 AM

    Because no one has invented that yet, sorry you just did, well done!

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    Mute Paul Breen
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    Feb 18th 2012, 5:49 PM

    Irish? Not really. Anglo-Irish or British, really.

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    Mute Ian Walsh
    Favourite Ian Walsh
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    Feb 18th 2012, 6:01 PM

    We were never British no matter way you want to word it. Ireland was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. We were never British. To be British you would have to be born in England, Wales or Scotland.

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    Mute Ingenious Ireland
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    Feb 18th 2012, 11:59 AM

    Great to see Rynd acknowledged at last. Other “ingenious Irish” inventions include… the stereo stethoscope, the submarine, the periscope, and the steam turbine that makes widespread electricity possible!

    (We’ve lots more Irish inventions in our list here too: http://ingeniousireland.ie/2011/02/how-the-ingenious-irish-changed-the-world/)

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