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Medication Abortion in Canada: A Right-to-Health Perspective
Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
  • Joanna Erdman, Dalhousie University Schulich School of Law
  • Amy Grenon, University of Toronto - Faculty of Law
  • Leigh Harrison-Wilson, Falconeri, Munro, Tucci LLP
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2008
Keywords
  • Medication Abortion,
  • Abortion Care,
  • Public Health,
  • Right To Health,
  • Mifepristone,
  • International Covenant on Economic,
  • Social,
  • and Cultural Rights,
  • International Obligations,
  • Canada
Abstract

The right to health under the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, to which Canada is a signatory, entitles women to available, accessible, and acceptable abortion care. Abortion care in Canada currently fails this standard. Medication abortion (the use of drugs to terminate a pregnancy) could improve abortion care in Canada, but its potential remains unrealized.

This is in part attributable to the unavailability of mifepristone, the safest and most effective pharmaceutical for medication abortion. Given that it could improve abortion care, we investigated why mifepristone remains unapproved in Canada, whether its unavailability is attributable to government inaction, and whether Canada is therefore failing to fulfill its obligations under the right to health.

Comments

Requests for reprints should be sent to Joanna N. Erdman, JD, LLM, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, 78 Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 2C5, Canada (e-mail: joanna.erdman@utoronto.ca).

Copyright © 2008 by the American Public Health Association https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2008.134684

Citation Information
Joanna Erdman, Amy Grenon, & Leigh Harrison-Wilson, "Medication Abortion in Canada: A Right-to-Health Perspective" (2008) 98: Am J Public Health 1764.