Philanthropy and the abortion postcode lottery
Bonney Corbin
In the wake of the US Supreme Court overturning Roe v Wade, do you know the reality of abortion access in Australia? And how many cannot be delivered without philanthropic support? Sophie Keramidopoulos and Bonney Corbin from MSI Australia (formerly Marie Stopes Australia) explain.˜
Abortion access in Australia is a postcode lottery. As seen in our Abortion Access Scorecard, there are more losers than winners.
Here are some examples of who, when and how people in Australia seek financial support for abortion care, starting with some anonymised examples.
- Aesha (she/her) is 27 years old, six weeks pregnancy gestation and wants a medical abortion via telehealth with $195 to contribute. Healthcare Card holder. $206 gap. She?s disabled with two children, receives child support and has $25 per week after expenses. Conception partner was an ex-boyfriend. She has contacted him for funds but he is refusing to contribute. She has a sister who has contributed $100, who lives interstate. She is currently calling her relatives asking for funds however so far they have been unsupportive of her choice.
- Bielle (she/her) is 31 years old, seven weeks pregnancy gestation and wants a medical abortion in clinic, with $370 to contribute. No Medicare card. $530 gap. Living with her husband and two children. She is on a temporary visa and most friends live on the other side of town. Husband works three casual jobs, he is supportive of her choice. She has requested a payment plan. They are behind on rent due to medical bills related to their oldest daughter. Payment plan could not start for three months and she would be reliant on husband?s income to pay.
- Celeen (she/her) is 21 years old, 19 weeks pregnancy gestation and wants a surgical abortion and hormonal IUD, with $400 to contribute. No Medicare card. $3,450 gap. Pregnant following a violent relationship, is on a temporary visa and is couch surfing with friends. She did not realise she was pregnant until 16 weeks gestation due to a history of sexual violence and disassociation. The local sexual assault service has crowdfunded the $400 from donations, and can act as her support person through the procedure.˜
- Deme (they/them) is 35 years old, 21 weeks pregnancy gestation and wants a surgical abortion with $2,745 to contribute. Medicare Card holder. $4,805 gap. Planned pregnancy conceived via IVF. Recent scan showed a fetal anomaly indicating high risk of stillbirth. Their partner has a part time job, and they are also a full time carer for an elderly relative. Their friends and chosen family had previously supported IVF costs and now fundraised for this contribution.
- can?t access abortion at their local public hospital or health service
- don?t have private health insurance or there is a waiting period on claims
- don?t have state/territory public funded pathways at clinics in their region
- have approached friends and family for financial support but still have a fee gap
- want a healthcare procedure that will increase in price and clinical complexity with every week that passes.