Call for statutory reform in abortion law

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Statutory reform is needed in abortion law because of serious tensions in how it can be interpreted, according to Kent's Professor Sally Sheldon.

Professor Sheldon, of Kent Law School, argues that abortion legislation no longer makes sense in the context of modern medical practice.

Her research, presented at a London conference, found that the lack of clarity is a particularly shocking failing in the context of legislation which threatens onerous criminal sanctions against professionals who are acting in good faith and providing safe care to women.

At the conference on 23 March, entitled How Can a State Control Swallowing? Medical Abortion and the Law, held at The Medical Society of London, Professor Sheldon presented her findings that abortion pills have brought about a revolution in abortion provision. There has been a significant decrease in maternal mortality worldwide and the pills now account for over half of all legal terminations reported in Britain.

In both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, where the regulation of abortion is highly restrictive, the widespread use of abortion pills is likely to be an important (but not the only) reason for the decline in numbers seeking access to abortion services in England.

Professor Sheldon, whose The Medical Abortion and the Law study forms part of a research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), is a leading expert and commentator on the regulation of abortion in the UK. The project is one of two in this area, with the second being a two-year historical study entitled The Abortion Act (1967): a Biography.