Abstract
Objectives
Little is known about the experiences of women who travel within Europe for abortion care from countries with relatively liberal laws. This paper aims to assess the primary reasons for travel among a sample of women who travelled from European countries with relatively liberal abortion laws to obtain abortion care mainly in the UK and the Netherlands.
Design
Multi‐country, 5‐year mixed methods study on barriers to legal abortion and travel for abortion.
Setting
UK, the Netherlands and Spain.
Population or Sample
We present quantitative data from 204 surveys, and qualitative data from 30 in‐depth interviews with pregnant people who travelled to the UK, the Netherlands and Spain from countries where abortion is legal on broad grounds within specific gestational age (GA) limits.
Methods
Mixed‐methods.
Main outcome measures
GA when presenting at abortion clinic, primary reason for abortion‐related travel.
Results
Study participants overwhelmingly reported travelling for abortion because they had exceeded GA limits in their country of residence. Participants also reported numerous delays and barriers to receiving care.
Conclusions
Our findings highlight the need for policies that support access to abortion throughout pregnancy and illustrate that early access to it is necessary but not sufficient to meet people’s reproductive health needs.
Funding
This study is funded by the European Research Council (ERC).
Tweetable abstract
This study shows that GA limits drive women from EU countries where abortion is legal to seek abortions abroad.
This study shows that GA limits drive women from EU countries where abortion is legal to seek abortions abroad.
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