fbpx
Wikipedia

Abortion in Canada

Abortion in Canada is legal throughout pregnancy and is publicly funded as a medical procedure under the combined effects of the federal Canada Health Act and provincial health-care systems.[1] However, access to services and resources varies by region.[2] While some restrictions exist,[1] Canada is one of the few nations with no criminal restrictions on abortion.[3][4] Abortion is subject to provincial healthcare regulatory rules and guidelines for physicians.[5][6] No provinces offer abortion on request at 24 weeks and beyond, although there are exceptions for certain medical complications.[7][8]

Formally banned in 1869, abortion would remain illegal in Canadian law for the next 100 years.[9] In 1969, the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968–69 legalized therapeutic abortions, as long as a committee of doctors certified that continuing the pregnancy would likely endanger the woman's life or health.[9] In 1988, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in R. v. Morgentaler that the existing law was unconstitutional, and struck down the 1969 Act.[10] The ruling found that the 1969 abortion law violated a woman's right to "life, liberty and security of the person" guaranteed under Section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms established in 1982.[11]

In Canada, all surgical abortions are performed by a physician, with nurse practitioners, pharmacists and midwives able to provide medications for non-invasive medical abortions within nine weeks (63 days) of gestation.[12][13] Canada has had a relatively stable abortion rate since decriminalization; the rate of recorded abortion per 1000 women of childbearing age (15–44) was 10.2 in 1974, rising to 16.4 abortions per thousand women in 1997, and declining to 10.1 abortions per 1000 women in 2020.[14][15][16] However, these rates of abortion only reflect the number of abortions reported by abortion clinics and hospitals. They do not account for unreported abortions in these setting or count abortions induced by prescription drugs such as mifepristone and misoprostol taken at home, and so these official rates of abortion undercount the true rate of abortion.[15] Nevertheless, Canada has a low abortion rate overall compared to other countries,[3] with approximately 74,000 abortions reported in 2020. Roughly half of abortions occur among women aged 18 to 29 years and roughly 90% of abortions are performed within the first trimester (12 weeks).[17]

History

Early history

 
Emily Howard Stowe was the first female physician to practise in Canada, the second licensed female physician in Canada and an activist for women's rights and suffrage.

During the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, abortion before the “quickening” (15–20 weeks[18]) was legal in the British North American colonies.[19] However, as the century progressed, the United Kingdom began to pass laws which created criminal offences relating to abortion, such as the Malicious Shooting or Stabbing Act 1803, that made performing or attempting to perform a post quickening abortion a death penalty offence. That was followed in 1837 by the Offences Against the Person Act 1837, that removed the death penalty clause, while making the procurement of any miscarriage unlawful.[19][20] The British North American provinces followed the British example and began restricting abortion rights.[20] Abortion was prohibited in Canada in 1869, two years after the country's formation.[20][21] That prohibition was continued in the Criminal Code until 1969. Anyone who procured a miscarriage for a woman was liable to imprisonment for life, while a woman who procured a miscarriage for herself was liable to imprisonment for two years.[22]

As in other countries, illegal abortions were still performed, and some cases charged that this led to the deaths of women. The abortion trial of Emily Stowe (1879) is one early example.[23] Another such case, Azoulay v. The Queen,[24] reached the Supreme Court in 1952. In both cases, the alleged abortion provider was ultimately acquitted of responsibility for the woman's death. Abortion rights activist Marilyn Wilson, former executive director of the Canadian Abortion Rights Action League, says, "Illegal abortions were common, but often of poor safety. Several hundred women per year died from botched abortions."[25]

Liberalisation of abortion laws

Chief Coroner Shulman

The movement to liberalize Canada's abortion laws began in the 1960s. Former Chief Coroner of Ontario Morton Shulman recalls that in the sixties, abortion could be legally performed only to save the life of the woman, so there were practically no legal abortions. He stated that the pregnant daughters of the rich were sent to reliable physicians who did abortions for cash. He estimated that these physicians did twenty to thirty abortions per week. Women who were not rich were left to perform an abortion on themselves or go to what he called a "nurse" abortionist. Their method was commonly pumping Lysol into the woman's womb. The mortality rate was high and the infection rate was over 50%. He added, "By the time I became Chief Coroner, I had had the unpleasant experience of seeing the bodies of some dozens of young women who had died as a result of these amateur abortions."[26]

Shulman decided to publicize deaths from illegal abortions.[27] He instructed his coroners to call a public inquest into each abortion death.[27] He describes one case that he believes was the turning point, that of 34-year-old Lottie Leanne Clarke, a mother of three children, who died of a massive infection in 1964 after an illegal abortion in spite of medical treatment and antibiotics. At the inquest into her death, the jury recommended that the laws about therapeutic abortion be revised. Shulman added that a federal government committee should review the question of abortion and the law. Newspapers published editorials recommending the reform of the abortion law. In 1965, the Minister of Justice, Guy Favreau, wrote to Shulman that the recommendation would be considered in the program to amend the Criminal Code. The eventual amendment closely followed the recommendations of the coroners' juries.[26]

Partial de-criminalisation

In 1967, Justice Minister Pierre Trudeau introduced a bill which included an amendment to the provision of the Criminal Code which prohibited abortions.[28] The bill, known as the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968–69, continued the basic prohibition on abortions, with the potential life sentence. However, the bill made an exception for abortions performed in a hospital with the approval of that hospital's three-doctor therapeutic abortion committee. The committee would have to certify that the pregnancy would be likely to endanger the life or health of the pregnant woman. The term health was not defined, and therapeutic abortion committees were free to develop their own theories as to when a likely danger to "health" (which might include psychological health) would justify a therapeutic abortion.[28] This same bill also legalized homosexuality and contraception, and would be the subject of one of Trudeau's most famous quotations: "The state has no business in the bedrooms of the nation."[29][30]

When he introduced the bill in 1967, Trudeau was Minister of Justice in the government of Prime Minister Lester Pearson. In 1968, Pearson retired and Trudeau succeeded him as prime minister. The bill did not pass before the 1968 election, but was re-introduced by John Turner, Minister of Justice in the Trudeau government. Parliament passed the bill in 1969.[31] In the 1970 federal statute revision, the provision was re-numbered as s. 251 of the Criminal Code.[32]

Badgley report

In 1975, a Committee on the Operation of the Abortion Law was appointed "to conduct a study to determine whether the procedure provided in the Criminal Code for obtaining therapeutic abortions [was] operating equitably across Canada", and to make recommendations "on the operation of this law rather than recommendations on the underlying policy". The Committee, known as the Badgley Committee after its Chair, Dr. Robin F. Badgley,[33] reported in January 1977. It found, quite simply, that "the procedures set out for the operation of Abortion Law are not working equitably across Canada". In large part, this was because the intent of the law was neither clear nor agreed upon. Access to abortion as set out in the Criminal Code was not available for many women due to variations in distribution of hospitals and doctors, and in whether Therapeutic Abortion Committees were set up and in doctors' interpretations of "health" for women, ages of consent, and parental notification requirements. The report recommended better family planning to reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies, but their main conclusion was that abortion services were not being delivered as required.[34]

Difficulties in access before decriminalization

By 1982, there were 66,319 legal abortions in Canada.[35] Interpretation of the 1969 law varied widely between doctors and hospitals, leading to uneven access. The standard was the physical or mental well-being of the woman, to be decided by a hospital's Therapeutic Abortion Committee. However, there was no requirement for a hospital to have a TAC to evaluate women. Only about one-third of hospitals had one. Some committees took a liberal stance and allowed most requests, while others blocked almost all requests. Access to legal abortions was easy in major metropolitan areas, but much harder outside large cities. In the province of Prince Edward Island, the lone Therapeutic Abortion Committee shut down, and there were no legal abortions in the province after 1982.[36] The Therapeutic Abortion Committees often took days or weeks to make their decisions, pushing a pregnancy further along than it would have been otherwise. The women were not seen by the committee, and had no right to appeal a decision. Advocates for abortion rights believed that the choice should be made by the woman, rather than a panel of doctors.[37]

Because of the lack of facilities in smaller provinces and rural areas, women were often forced to travel to major cities at their own expense. In Newfoundland, there was only a single gynaecologist who performed abortions. Many women had to buy expensive plane tickets to Toronto or Montreal to get an abortion.[35] Other women chose to travel to the United States, where abortions became available at many private clinics after the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973. In 1982, 4,311 Canadian women travelled to the United States for an abortion.[36]

Constitutional challenges to the abortion law

 
Dr. Henry Morgentaler was an abortion-rights advocate physician who fought numerous legal battles aimed at expanding abortion rights.

In defiance of the law, Dr. Henry Morgentaler began performing abortions at his clinic in Montreal without approval of a therapeutic abortion committee.[38] He challenged the constitutionality of the abortion law on two separate occasions. The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed his first constitutional challenge in 1975, brought under the division of powers and the Canadian Bill of Rights, but in 1988, the Supreme Court allowed his second challenge, brought under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Court held that the abortion law was inoperative. Morgentaler eventually brought a third constitutional challenge, to a provincial law restricting access to abortions. He was successful in that challenge as well.

Morgentaler's struggle prompted a nationwide movement to reform Canada's abortion laws. In 1970, as part of the Abortion Caravan, 35 women chained themselves to the parliamentary gallery in the House of Commons, closing Parliament for the first time in Canadian history.[39]

First Morgentaler challenge: 1975

In 1973, Morgentaler stated publicly that he had performed 5,000 abortions without the permission of the three-doctor committees, even going so far as to videotape himself performing operations.[40]

The Crown prosecution service of Quebec prosecuted Morgentaler three times, and each time juries refused to convict him despite his outright admission that he had performed many abortions. The Crown appealed the first acquittal. In 1974, the Quebec Court of Appeal overturned the jury's verdict of acquittal in the first case, substituted a guilty verdict, and returned the matter to the trial judge for sentencing.[41]

Morgentaler then appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada on several grounds, arguing that:

  • the Criminal Code provision was unconstitutional under the division of powers;
  • the provision was inoperative under the Canadian Bill of Rights;
  • the Court of Appeal did not have the authority to overturn the jury verdict of acquittal;
  • the defence of necessity was available;
  • s. 45 of the Criminal Code, which provided that a medical practitioner was not criminally liable for performing surgical procedures, was available as a defence.

In 1975, the Supreme Court dismissed his appeal by a 6–3 decision: Morgentaler v The Queen.[42] The Court was unanimous that the provision was valid criminal law, and therefore within the constitutional authority of the federal Parliament; it did not intrude on provincial jurisdiction over health. The Court also held unanimously that the law did not infringe the Canadian Bill of Rights.[43]

The Court gave those rulings from the bench, with written reasons on these points later given by Chief Justice Laskin.[44] However, the Court split 6–3 on the issues of necessity and s. 45 of the Criminal Code, which provided that a medical doctor who performed a surgery according to reasonable medical standards was immune from criminal liability:

  • Six members of the Court, for reasons written by Justice Pigeon, held that the Criminal Code provisions respecting Crown appeals authorised the Court of Appeal to substitute a guilty verdict.[45]
  • Six members also held, for reasons given by Justice Pigeon and Justice Dickson, that the defences of necessity and s. 45 did not apply to the criminal offence of procuring an abortion.[46]
  • In dissent, three members of the Court, for reasons written by Chief Justice Laskin, would have held that the defences of necessity and s. 45 were available and therefore properly considered by the jury.[47]

As a result, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction entered by the Court of Appeal and remitted the matter to the trial judge for sentencing. The trial judge imposed a sentence of eighteen months imprisonment.

Public outcry over the decision caused the federal government to introduce an amendment to the Criminal Code (commonly known as the Morgentaler Amendment) taking away the jurisdiction of appeal courts to substitute a conviction for a jury's verdict of acquittal.[48][49]

Following the third jury acquittal, the Quebec government declared that the law was unenforceable and no further charges were brought.[10]

Second Morgentaler challenge: 1988

Upon his release from prison in Quebec, Morgentaler decided to challenge the federal abortion law in other provinces. Over the next ten years, he opened and operated private abortion clinics across the country in direct violation of the law. Following a fourth jury acquittal in 1984, the Ontario government appealed the decision. The Ontario Court of Appeal set aside the acquittal and ordered a re-trial.[10]

Morgentaler, in turn, appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada. In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court declared in 1988 the entirety of the country's abortion law to be unconstitutional: R. v. Morgentaler.[11] By a 5-2 decision, the Court held that section 251 of the Criminal Code was of no force or effect because it violated section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Section 7 states that: "Everyone has the right to life, liberty, and the security of the person, and the right not to be deprived thereof, except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice." The Court also held that the infringement could not be justified under s. 1 of the Charter, which in some cases allows a government to provide a reasonable justification for an infringement.

There was no single majority judgment. Chief Justice Dickson, Justice Beetz, and Justice Wilson all wrote decisions finding the law to be unconstitutional, but for varying reasons in support. Justice McIntyre wrote the dissenting opinion.

Chief Justice Dickson held that "[f]orcing a woman, by threat of criminal sanction, to carry a fetus to term unless she meets certain criteria unrelated to her own priorities and aspirations" infringed the woman's right to security of the person, as protected by s. 7 of the Charter.[50] Justice Wilson found that the law "asserts that the woman's capacity to reproduce is to be subject, not to her own control, but to that of the state" which similarly breached the right to security of the person.[51][10]

Having found that law infringed the right to security of the person, the majority then considered whether that infringement was consistent with the principles of fundamental justice, which is the second branch of s. 7 of the Charter. The judges in the majority agreed that the procedural requirements to obtain an abortion, as set forth in the law, were especially troublesome. Only accredited or approved hospitals could perform abortions, which imposed a barrier to local access. The law also specified that women wanting an abortion were required to obtain approval from a "therapeutic abortion committee" in a hospital. The committee was composed of at least three physicians appointed by the hospital's board of members, and did not include the practitioner who was to perform the procedure.[52] The court found that the committee requirement was deeply flawed, in part because of the long delays caused by the committees and that in many hospitals, the committees were merely committees on paper and did not actually approve abortions.

Chief Justice Dickson held that "the structure -- the system regulating access to therapeutic abortions -- is manifestly unfair. It contains so many potential barriers to its own operation that the defence it creates will in many circumstances be practically unavailable to women who would prima facie qualify..." Noted barriers included a lack of hospitals with committees, doctors who did not wish to refer matters to committees, the lack of a standard meaning for "health" leading to inconsistent standards among committees, and geographical and financial differentials in treatment. He concluded the provision violated the principles of fundamental justice.[53]

The majority of the court in Morgentaler did not find it necessary to consider whether there was a substantive right to abortion under Section 7. Justice Wilson was of the opinion that such a right existed, but the other judges in the majority made their decision on procedural grounds, relating to the insufficiencies in the committee process.

Attempts at a new law

Following the 1988 Supreme Court decision, the Mulroney government made two attempts to enact a new abortion law.

In the spring of 1988, the government first attempted to find a compromise solution that would give easy access to abortion in the early stages of pregnancy and criminalize late term ones. The motion in the House of Commons was defeated 147 to 76, voted against by both MPs who opposed easy access to abortions and those who opposed adding any abortion rules to the Criminal Code.[54]

The Supreme Court decision became an important issue in the 1988 federal election later that fall. Both the Progressive Conservative and Liberal parties were sharply divided on the issue and neither party advanced a concrete platform on the abortion issue. Prime Minister Brian Mulroney declared he was opposed to "abortion on demand", but gave no details on what that meant legally.[55] Liberal leader John Turner stated that MPs should be allowed to vote their conscience, but refused to give his own opinion on the issue. NDP leader Ed Broadbent had a firm position that abortion is a medical matter, not a criminal one, and should be left to a woman and her doctor.[56] The Mulroney government was returned in the 1988 election.

In 1989, the government introduced a much stricter bill in the House of Commons. If enacted, it would ban all abortions unless a doctor ruled the woman's life or health would be threatened. Anyone found in violation of the law could be imprisoned for up to two years.[57] The House of Commons passed the new bill by nine votes, with the cabinet being whipped in favour and most anti-abortion members supporting it.[58] In June 1990, a teenager from Kitchener, Ontario, was injured during a botched abortion performed in a man's home. Several days later, a Toronto woman, Yvonne Jurewicz, died from a self-induced, coat-hanger abortion.[59] These cases were reported in the news and the latter case was discussed at multiple levels of government. Speaking in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, New Democratic MLA Darlene Marzari pointed out:

For our purposes, though technically speaking the bill has not been proclaimed, Bill C-43 is, in the minds of the public and in the minds of women, now law. In fact, while we're dancing on the head of a pin and counting ourselves as angels, a woman in Toronto has died—she bled to death—three weeks ago. Her name was Yvonne Jurewicz, she was 20 years old and was probably afraid to go to the doctor and afraid to go to the hospital after she tried to abort herself. This is the sad fact of Bill C-43. While we debate the minor points of whether or not the Lieutenant Governor or the Governor-General of Canada has picked it up, we know that young women in this country are under the impression they will be considered criminals if they show up in an emergency ward door hemorrhaging.[60]

Reform Party MP Deborah Grey, who supported the bill, denied that this death, the first known death from illegal abortion in Ontario in twenty years, could have anything to do with the publicity surrounding the passing of Bill C-43.[citation needed] But in Ontario, the connection was made. Richard Johnston, MPP suggested to Premier David Peterson that Ontario announce it would not start any third-party prosecutions against women or doctors, to prevent any further tragedies and to reassure doctors that they could go on providing services to the women of Ontario.[61]

A few months later, the bill failed in the Senate on a tie vote. Under the rules of the Senate, a tie meant the measure was defeated.[62] The defeat was somewhat unexpected since it was the first time since 1941 that the Senate, whose members are appointed, had outright defeated legislation passed by the House. Eike-Henner Kluge, the director of the Canadian Medical Association ethics and legal affairs committee, viewed that the bill was flawed ethically. Kluge drafted an analysis for a Senate committee about Bill C-43 and his presentation may have swayed two votes to change resulting in a tie vote which resulted in the Senate not passing the Bill C-43.[5]

In the wake of the controversy surrounding passage of the Goods and Services Tax the Progressive Conservative government did not wish to provoke a contest of wills with the Senate and announced it would not re-introduce the legislation. The fact that no subsequent government has re-visited this decision has led to the situation of Canada having no criminal abortion law. Abortion is now treated like any other medical procedure, governed by provincial and medical regulations.

Later cases relating to abortion

The court in Morgentaler did not consider the question of whether the unborn were included in the "everyone" who have the right to life. At that time, another case before the courts would have raised that issue; it was brought by Joe Borowski, a former member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. However, after the Morgentaler decision, the Supreme Court held, in Borowski v Canada (AG), that his case was moot since Morgentaler had struck down the provisions Borowski was challenging.[63]

Two further cases, Tremblay v. Daigle[64] and R. v. Sullivan,[65] relied on the born alive rule, inherited from English common law, to determine that the fetus was not a person: Sullivan could not be charged with murder of a fetus and Tremblay could not seek standing in court as the guardian of a fetus. The 1989 Supreme Court of Canada case of Tremblay v Daigle[64] is one of the most widely publicized cases concerning abortion in Canada after the law prohibiting abortions was overturned by the Supreme Court of Canada. Daigle's ex-boyfriend obtained a restraining order against her having an abortion. While the restraining order was issued in Quebec, it was legally restricting Canada-wide. The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that only the woman could make the choice; the man had no legal say in a woman's choice to terminate a pregnancy or carry it to completion.

Daigle had already had a late second-term abortion before the Court ruled on her case. While the case was fast-tracked, the progress was so slow that Daigle would have been in the third-trimester had she waited for the ruling to be handed down. Daigle had an abortion in the United States while the case was before the Supreme Court of Canada. This was not made public until after the ruling, although it was not unexpected. This is in contrast to the Roe v. Wade case in the United States where Roe had carried the pregnancy to term. That case, however, was different from the Tremblay v. Daigle case in that it was about whether abortion was legal. In the Tremblay v. Daigle case, the question was whether a male partner has a say in whether a woman can obtain an abortion ruling.

Two further cases addressed the "interest in the fetus". In Dobson (Litigation Guardian of) v. Dobson,[66] a grandfather attempted to act on behalf of a child born with cerebral palsy, supposedly resulting from a car accident in which the mother was the driver. He attempted to sue the mother with negligence in driving. The mother was in favor of the suit succeeding as it would have provided her with funds to raise her disabled child; her insurance company was defending the suit through subrogation. Citing the case of Kamloops v. Nielsen,[67] the Court decided that courts cannot impose a duty of care on a pregnant woman toward her fetus because it would interfere with the exercise of her autonomy rights during pregnancy and faced difficulty in defining a standard of care in pregnancy. Only a legislature can do this. In Winnipeg Child & Family Services (Northwest Area) v. G. (D.F.), the Supreme Court determined that a pregnant woman addicted to solvents could not be civilly committed for treatment.[68]

Case law

Accessibility and methods

Surgical and non-invasive medical abortions in Canada are provided on request for any reason, are confidential for all ages and funded by Medicare; to those who are covered by provincial/territorial medical care plans (depending on the province or territory, this always includes Canadian citizens and permanent residents, but may vary on inclusion of international students, workers, and protected persons or refugee claimants). For those not covered by a medical care plan (e.g. Americans in states that prohibit abortion after the decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization), the federal government has committed to letting them obtain abortions in Canada without restriction. However, this will be contingent on them being able to pay for travel costs and the procedure themselves.[69]

Nationally, abortion is legal through all nine months (40 weeks) of pregnancy,[12] nevertheless no providers in Canada offer care beyond 23 weeks and 6 days.[8] Restrictions are based on professional medical guidelines, resources available (equipment, trained personnel) and individual facility mandates makes access to all types of services vary by region within each province and territory.[8][70][7] Each province and territory regulates and funds their own healthcare system. The federal government provides funding to each province and territory, provided they comply with the requirements of the Canada Health Act. One of those requirements is comprehensiveness, which means that all insured health services defined by the Act must be covered by a provincial or territorial health plan for that province or territory to receive federal funds.[71] Abortion is not specifically mentioned in the Canada Health Act. It is simply included in the broad definition of "insured health services", just like other medical and surgical procedures.[72]

One-third of hospitals perform surgical abortions, and these perform two-thirds of surgical abortions in the country. The remaining surgical abortions are performed by public and private clinics.[73] Medical abortions are available in Canada using medications such as methotrexate, or misoprostol, and/or mifepristone.[12][13] Mifepristone used in combination with misoprostol (brand name Mifegymiso) was approved for use in Canada when prescribed by a doctor on July 29, 2015.[74] In 2017 the approval expanded to include prescribing abilities to nurse practitioners, midwives and pharmacist based on provincial regulations,[75] and it may be dispensed by pharmacists directly to the patient.[13]

Nationwide information is provided by advocacy associations such as the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada and National Abortion Federation that maintain detailed lists of abortion clinics by province and the maximum gestational period that the clinic will provide abortion types up to.[7][70] These sites also provide information on how to obtain medication involving medical abortions, how to obtain financial support for travel/accommodation expenses, after-treatment supplies, child care and various other needs.[70][7]

Accessibility by province and territory

There is no abortion law in Canada, but provincial and territorial health regulations
and professional bodies restrict the procedure to various grounds or gestational limits.
There are also significant disparities between rural and urban access to abortion.[7][8]
Region Gestational limits[8] # of providers[8] Notes
  Alberta 20 weeks 5 The province has abortion services accessible in Edmonton and Calgary.[76] All abortion services are offered.[77]
  British Columbia 23 weeks and 6 days 24 The province is governed by the Access to Abortion Services Act, which limits political demonstrations outside abortion-providing facilities, doctor's offices, and doctor's homes to set distances. BC Women's Hospital & Health Centre can provide late-term abortions in Vancouver up until the 25th week of pregnancy (its CARE Program).[78] There are six abortion clinics throughout the province that can be accessed without a doctor referral and upwards of 30 hospitals that are required to perform abortions with a doctor's referral.[79][80]
  Manitoba 19 weeks and 6 days 4 The province has limited access for those in rural communities. Aspiration or surgical procedures are available for up to 19 weeks and 6 days. Medical abortions up to 9 weeks.[81]
  New Brunswick 16 weeks 5 New Brunswick does not use public funding to pay for abortion services outside of hospital settings. This means that abortions provided in clinics are not funded by the government.[82]
  Newfoundland and Labrador 15 weeks 4 Planned Parenthood Newfoundland and Labrador is the only sexual health clinic in the province.[83][7] Full spectrum doula services.[70]
  Northwest Territories 19 weeks and 6 days 1 Northern Options for Women (abbreviated as NOW) provides both medical and surgical abortion services in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.[84]
  Nova Scotia 16 weeks 11 In Nova Scotia, there is an abortion clinic in Halifax or someone needing an abortion can call the abortion helpline for other options throughout the province that may be closer to them.[85]
  Nunavut 12 weeks 2 All abortions must be performed in a hospital.[86]
  Ontario 23 weeks and 6 days 38 Intimidation of and interference with patients or providers are illegal in "safe access zones" around abortion-providing clinics and other requesting health care facilities; the offices (on request) of providing doctors, nurses, pharmacists and some other providers; and providers' homes under the Safe Access to Abortion Services Act, 2017.[87] There are nine regions in Ontario where abortion is available with full spectrum doula services.[70][7]
  Prince Edward Island 12 weeks and 6 days 1 Prince Edward Island offers in province abortions up until 12 weeks and 6 days pregnant. After that limit, an out of province surgical abortion would have to be performed. A referral must be obtained through a PEI physician prior to any surgical procedure.[88]
  Quebec 23 weeks and 6 days 49 The province has a multitude of options for abortion access.[89] Historically, late-term abortions (beyond 30 weeks) had to be performed in the US with all expenses paid by the Quebec government. This changed in 2020 because of Covid travel restrictions.[90]
  Saskatchewan 18 weeks and 6 days 3 Few resources available to those in rural areas.[91]
  Yukon 12 weeks and 6 days 1 Whitehorse General Hospital is the only location in Yukon available for both medical and early aspiration abortions.[70][7]

Politics

As of 2023, all federally represented political parties in Canada, as well as their leaders, support continued legal abortion access in Canada. While elected members of the Bloc Québécois, New Democratic Party, the Liberal Party of Canada, and the Green Party of Canada nearly universally support abortion rights and all these parties' MPs would be expected to vote against any hypothetical Bills that would restrict or limit abortion rights in any way,[92] the Conservative Party of Canada has both members who favour abortion rights and members who oppose them and has stated that members would be allowed to vote their conscience on any vote concerning abortion. In the past, more Conservative members have been against abortion.

The Conservative Party has had to wrestle with combining the conflicting social policies of its two predecessor parties, the moderate Progressive Conservative Party and the more right-wing Canadian Alliance, which merged in 2003. Many socially conservative Alliance supporters were angered at the prospect of Belinda Stronach, who favoured abortion rights, winning the leadership election in early 2004, while in contrast, some Progressive Conservative supporters objected during the 2004 federal election to the new party's perceived openness to legislation that would restrict abortion rights. In the March 2005 policy convention, in a narrow vote, the party voted to not introduce legislation on the subject of abortion (members can still introduce private members bills on the issue), although it condemns sex-selective abortions.[93] The party's stance on abortion is frequently voted on at the party's policy conventions. Motion 312 was introduced by Conservative MP Stephen Woodworth in 2012, calling for a House of Commons committee to determine when human life begins, but was defeated 203–91.[94] In 2013, Conservative MP Mark Warawa introduced a motion condemning discrimination against females through sex-selective abortion.[95] In 2021, Conservative Cathay Wagantall introduced a private member's bill that would prohibit a medical practitioner from performing a sex-selective abortion. Although the bill was defeated 248-82, a majority of Conservative MPs voted in favour of the bill.[96]

Until recently, the Liberal Party had a few anti-abortion MPs, such as Liberal MP Paul Steckle introduced a bill that would have made abortion after 20 weeks gestation a criminal act in June 2006.[97] Current Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has required that all Liberal party candidates will have to vote according to the party's abortion-rights policy since he assumed leadership of the Liberal Party in 2013.[98]

Although the issue of abortion rights has popped up from time to time in federal elections as a wedge issue, the issue is consistently rated as a low priority for most Canadians. The Christian Heritage Party of Canada claims to be Canada's only stated anti-abortion federal political party, but has never had a member elected to parliament.

On October 19, 2012, anti-abortion protester Patricia Maloney expressed concern over 491 cases of live-birth abortions between 2000 and 2009. The finding reported to Statistics Canada did not include detailed information on how long each fetus survived after removal or how many would have been possible to save. Canada, unlike the United States, does not specifically have a law confirming or denying the legal rights of a baby who survives abortion. On January 23, 2013, Conservative MPs Wladyslaw Lizon, Leon Benoit, and Maurice Vellacott wrote a letter requesting that the RCMP investigate how many of the 491 live-birth abortions meet the definition of homicide set forth in the Criminal Code.[99][100] When CBC and The Canadian Press used the phrase "investigate all abortions performed after 19 weeks gestation", Vellacott accused the media outlets of false reporting and acknowledged that abortion in Canada is fully legal.[101] The CBC / Canadian Press story was subsequently corrected.[99] The move drew approval from Dr. Eike-Henner Kluge, former director of ethics and legal affairs for the Canadian Medical Association, who said that doctors should "do the best [they] can for what is now a person in the eyes of the law". However, Dr. Douglas Black, president of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, said that the situation is not one of homicide, but rather allowing fetuses "to pass away, depending on what the circumstances are, sometimes in their mom's arms".[100]

Opinion polls

  • In a poll conducted by the National Post in November 2002, 78% of respondents answered "yes" to the question: "Should women have complete freedom on their decision to have an abortion?".[102]
  • In an April 2006 Leger poll, 34% of respondents said they found abortion "immoral", behind paedophilia, extramarital affairs, prostitution, alcohol abuse, sexual relations before the age of 16, pornographic films, and blasphemy.[103]
  • In a June 2008 Angus Reid Strategies poll, almost half of respondents (46%) believe abortion should be permitted in all cases. Roughly one in five Canadians (19%) would subject abortion to greater restrictions than now, 22% would allow the procedure only in cases such as rape, incest and to save the woman's life, and seven percent would only permit abortion to save the woman's life. Among provinces, British Columbia and Quebec have the highest percentage who are supporting abortion-rights, and the Prairies have the highest percentage who are anti-abortion and younger, wealthier, and university-educated respondents are more likely to uphold the legality of abortion.[104]
  • In a March 2010 EKOS poll, a majority of Canadians (52%) describe themselves as "pro-choice" while just over one in four (27%) describe themselves as "pro-life". One in ten respondents (10%) describe themselves as neither "pro-choice" nor "pro-life", and 11% did not respond.[105]
  • In an IPSOS poll conducted in 2017, 77% said abortions should be permitted, which is higher than the global average of 71%.[106] A majority of Canadians (53%) said abortion should be permitted whenever a woman decides she wants to abort, while 24% favoured access under only some circumstances, such as when a woman has been raped.[106] A further 7% believed that abortion should only be permitted when a woman's life is in danger, and 5% believed the procedure should be illegal under any circumstance; 11% said they were unsure.[106]
  • In a 2020 DART & Maru/Blue Voice Canada poll, 75% of Canadians said they were “satisfied” with Canada's abortion policies and 25% were not satisfied.[107] The strongest satisfaction was found in Québec (85%), followed by British Columbia (75%), Ontario (72%), Alberta (70%), Atlantic Canada (68%), and Manitoba and Saskatchewan (70%).[108] Satisfaction with Canada's policies were nearly identical across gender and age groups, with slightly higher favourability amongst middle and high-income Canadians as compared with those earning less than CDN$50,000 (78% vs. 74%).[108] In the poll, 71% of Canadians said that the government should not re-open the issue, and just 10% said they should re-open it; 8% professed indifference.[108] Canadians were almost equally split on whether they thought the government should even discuss creating a regulatory framework for abortion.[108] 70% of Canadians said they found abortion acceptable, vs. 10% who found it unacceptable; 11% professed indifference, and 10% said they didn't know.[108]
  • In a 2020 IPSOS poll, support for abortion rights were slightly stronger than in 2017: 59% of Canadians said that abortion should be permitted whenever a woman wants one, with 18% saying it should only be permitted under limited circumstances (such as after rape), and 6% saying it should only be legal if the mother's life were in danger; just 4% said it should not be legal under any circumstances, while 13% either said they didn't know or that they preferred not to express an opinion.[109]
  • A 2022 poll by Research Co found that 44% of Canadians believe that abortion should be legal under any circumstances, 37% think that abortion should be legal only under certain circumstances, and 10% think that abortion should be illegal in all circumstances. Support for legal abortion under any circumstances was highest in Quebec (50%), then Saskatchewan and Manitoba (47%), British Columbia (46%), the Maritime provinces (43%), Alberta (40%), and Ontario (39%). Support for legal abortion under any circumstances was highest among self-identified NDP voters (57%), followed by Liberal voters (48%), and Conservative voters (32%).[110]

Abortion rights movement

The abortion rights movement in Canada focuses on establishing abortion as a component of provincial health care plans, to ensure it is available in all regions, especially for those who couldn't afford it otherwise.

Dr. Henry Morgentaler was widely seen as the one individual personifying the Canadian abortion rights movement, but organizations such as the Canadian Abortion Rights Action League (CARAL), Canadians for Choice, and the Pro-Choice Action Network also contributed significantly to advancing the abortion rights movement in Canada. CARAL folded, and has been replaced by the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada, whose focus is on the objectives mentioned above. Feminist or pro-feminism organizations also contribute to promote the abortion rights approach.

The Canadian affiliate of Planned Parenthood, now known as the Canadian Federation for Sexual Health, is also in favour of abortion rights, and while it does refer pregnant women to abortion providers, it does not have a history (unlike its American counterpart) of engaging in widespread litigation in favour of legalized abortion.

Anti-abortion movement

 
Anti-abortion ad on truck. Vancouver, British Columbia

The anti-abortion movement, which self-identifies as the pro-life movement, disapproves of the lack of legal restrictions on abortion in Canada and of abortions being funded by provincial health care programs,[111] even if the abortion is not for therapeutic reasons. A medical reason for obtaining an abortion is no longer required in Canada since the 1988 removal of abortion from the Criminal Code.[112][113]

The anti-abortion movement in Canada is represented by the Catholic Church, Prolife Alberta,[114] The Wilberforce Project,[115] Campaign Life Coalition, REAL Women of Canada, We Need A Law,[116] Abortion in Canada,[117] Action Life (Ottawa), Inc.,[118] among other organizations. Anti-abortion rallies or Marches for Life occur annually in Ottawa and in some provincial capitals, drawing thousands of people,[119] although many of these marches were cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Violence towards abortion providers

  • In 1983, Henry Morgentaler was attacked by a man wielding garden shears; the attack was blocked by feminist activist Judy Rebick, who was standing nearby.[120]
  • In 1992, Morgentaler's Toronto clinic was firebombed and sustained severe damage. The event occurred at night, so no one was injured, although a nearby bookstore was damaged. Appointments were switched to another clinic in Toronto and no abortions were prevented.[121]
  • On November 8, 1994, Vancouver doctor Garson Romalis was shot in the leg.[122]
  • On November 10, 1995, Dr. Hugh Short of Ancaster, Ontario, was shot in the elbow.[122]
  • On November 11, 1997, Dr. Jack Fainman of Winnipeg was shot in the shoulder.[122]
  • On July 11, 2000, Dr. Garson Romalis was stabbed by an unidentified assailant in the lobby of his clinic.[123]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b J. Cherie Strachan; Lori M. Poloni-Staudinger; Shannon Jenkins; Candice D. Ortbals (2019). Why Don't Women Rule the World?: Understanding Women's Civic and Political Choices. SAGE Publications. p. 115. ISBN 978-1-5443-1727-4.
  2. ^ Sethna, Christabelle; Doull, Marion (2013). "Spatial disparities and travel to freestanding abortion clinics in Canada". Women's Studies International Forum. Elsevier BV. 38: 52–62. doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2013.02.001. ISSN 0277-5395.
  3. ^ a b Sally Sheldon; Kaye Wellings (March 2020). Decriminalising Abortion in the UK: What Would It Mean?. Policy Press. pp. 104–105. ISBN 978-1-4473-5401-7.
  4. ^ Christine Ammer; JoAnn E. Manson (February 2009). The Encyclopedia of Women's Health. Infobase Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-8160-7407-5. Retrieved November 28, 2011.
  5. ^ Shannon Stettner; Kristin Burnett; Travis Hay, eds. (December 1, 2017). Abortion: History, Politics, and Reproductive Justice after Morgentaler. UBC Press. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-7748-3576-3. OCLC 1013541249.
  6. ^ Sheldon, Sally; Wellings, Kaye, eds. (March 23, 2020). Decriminalising Abortion in the UK: What Would It Mean?. Policy Press. pp. 107–. ISBN 978-1-4473-5402-4. OCLC 1145588167.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "Abortion Coverage by Region". National Abortion Federation Canada.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Access at a Glance: Abortion Services in Canada | Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights". Action Canada for Sexual Health & Rights. While abortions after 20 weeks are statistically very rare (<2.5% of all abortions), there are people in Canada who require abortion beyond 20 weeks for serious and important reasons. There are only three service locations in Canada that offer abortion up to 23 weeks and 6 days (one in British Columbia, one in Southern Ontario, and one in Quebec). No providers in Canada offer abortion care beyond 23 weeks and 6 days.
  9. ^ a b Victoria Bromley (2012). Feminisms Matter: Debates, Theories, Activism. University of Toronto Press. pp. 26–32. ISBN 978-1-4426-0502-2.
  10. ^ a b c d Radha Jhappan (2002). Women's Legal Strategies in Canada. University of Toronto Press. pp. 335–338. ISBN 978-0-8020-7667-0.
  11. ^ a b R v Morgentaler, [1988] 1 SCR 30.
  12. ^ a b c "Love4Life, Methods".
  13. ^ a b c Dunn, Sheila; Brooks, Melissa (2018). "Mifepristone". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 190 (22): E688. doi:10.1503/cmaj.180047. PMC 5988520. PMID 29866894.
  14. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (October 25, 2010). "Pregnancy outcomes (live births, induced abortions, and fetal loss)". www150.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  15. ^ a b Canadian Institute for Health Information. "Induced Abortions Reported in Canada in 2020".
  16. ^ Shaw, Dorothy; Norman, Wendy V. (2020). "When there are no abortion laws: A case study of Canada" (PDF). Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology. 62: 49–62. doi:10.1016/j.bpobgyn.2019.05.010. PMID 31281015. S2CID 181481915.
  17. ^ "Statistics - Abortion in Canada" (PDF). Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada - Statistics Canada. 2020.
  18. ^ Levene, Malcolm et al. Essentials of Neonatal Medicine (Blackwell 2000), page 8. Retrieved 2007-02-15.
  19. ^ a b Saurette, P.; Gordon, K. (2016). The Changing Voice of the Anti-Abortion Movement: The Rise of "Pro-Woman" Rhetoric in Canada and the United States. University of Toronto Press. pp. 92–97. ISBN 978-1-4426-6876-8. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
  20. ^ a b c Stephanie Paterson (June 2014). Fertile Ground: Exploring Reproduction in Canada. MQUP. p. 234. ISBN 978-0-7735-9212-4.
  21. ^ An Act respecting Offences against the Person, SC 1869, c. 20, s. 59, 60.
  22. ^ Criminal Code, SC 1953-54, c. 51, s. 237(1),(2). Section 237(1) provided: "Every one who, with intent to procure the miscarriage of a female person, whether or not she is pregnant, uses any means for the purpose of carrying out his intention is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for life."
  23. ^ Constance B. Backhouse, "The Celebrated Abortion Trial of Dr. Emily Stowe, Toronto, 1879", Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin canadien d'histoire de la médecine, Volume 8: 1991, pages 159–187.
  24. ^ Azoulay v. The Queen, [1952] 2 S.C.R. 495.
  25. ^ "Three decades of choice: Canada's landmark abortion law is 30 years old tomorrow." Marilyn Wilson. The Gazette May 13, 1999. pg. B.3
  26. ^ a b Shulman, Morton. Coroner, pp 58–61 Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 1975.
  27. ^ a b Kaevan Gazdar (2016). Feminism's Founding Fathers: The Men Who Fought for Women's Rights. John Hunt Publishing. p. 148. ISBN 978-1-78099-161-0.
  28. ^ a b I. Morgan; P. Davies (2008). The Federal Nation: Perspectives on American Federalism. Springer. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-230-61725-4.
  29. ^ Shannon Stettner; Kristin Burnett; Travis Hay (December 1, 2017). Abortion: History, Politics, and Reproductive Justice after Morgentaler. UBC Press. pp. 76–. ISBN 978-0-7748-3576-3.
  30. ^ Trudeau's Omnibus Bill: Challenging Canadian Taboos (TV clip). Canada: CBC. December 21, 1967.
  31. ^ Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968–69, SC 1968-69, c. 38.
  32. ^ Criminal Code, RSC 1970, c. C-34, s. 251.
  33. ^ "ROBIN BADGLEY Obituary - (2012) - Toronto Star". www.legacy.com.
  34. ^ Dunsmuir, Mollie. Abortion: Constitutional and Legal Developments, Section D: The Badgley Report. Government of Canada, Law and Government Division.
  35. ^ a b "Abortions more difficult to obtain, groups say Women must travel, borrow for procedure." Ann Rauhala. The Globe and Mail. Toronto, Ont.: January 30, 1987. pg. A.1
  36. ^ a b "Abortion access widely varies across Canada." Joan Bryden. The Ottawa Citizen. January 30, 1988. pg. B.6
  37. ^ "Continue clinic abortions despite law, group urges." The Globe and Mail. March 17, 1982. pg. P.8
  38. ^ Nancy Lewis; Isabel Dyck; Sara McLafferty (2001). Geographies of Women's Health: Place, Diversity and Difference. SUNY Press. pp. 92–94. ISBN 978-0-203-18602-2.
  39. ^ Marian Sawer (June 24, 2008). Women's movements: flourishing or in abeyance?. Psychology Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-415-46245-7. Retrieved November 28, 2011.
  40. ^ Robin Stevenson (2019). My Body My Choice: The Fight for Abortion Rights. Orca Book Publishers. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4598-1714-2.
  41. ^ "Regina v. Morgentaler (No. 5), 1974 CanLII 1369 (QC CA)".
  42. ^ Morgentaler v The Queen, [1976] 1 SCR 616.
  43. ^ Canadian Bill of Rights, SC 1960, c. 44.
  44. ^ Morgentaler v The Queen, pp. 624–637.
  45. ^ Morgentaler v The Queen, pp. 661–670 (Pigeon), 685 (Dickson, concurring).
  46. ^ Morgentaler v The Queen, pp. 659–660, 671 (Pigeon), pp. 675–681 (Dickson).
  47. ^ Morgentaler v The Queen, pp. 642–655.
  48. ^ "A crusader's legacy: How Henry Morgentaler changed Canada's laws". cbc.ca.
  49. ^ Now found in the Criminal Code, RSC 1985, c. C-46, s. 686(4)(b).
  50. ^ R v Morgentaler, p. 63.
  51. ^ R v Morgentaler, p. 173.
  52. ^ R v Morgentaler, pp. 65-66.
  53. ^ R v Morgentaler, pp. 66-72.
  54. ^ "Abortion motions rejected. Govt. given little help on new law." Stephen Bindman. The Ottawa Citizen. July 29, 1988. pg. A.1.FRO
  55. ^ "Silence broken: PM is opposed to abortion on demand." Heather Bird. Toronto Star. August 3, 1988. pg. A.1
  56. ^ "PM, Opposition leader vague on abortion law." Portia Priegert. The Vancouver Sun. October 26, 1988. pg. B.4
  57. ^ "Turner admits abortion bill may be 'best we can get'" Iain Hunter. The Ottawa Citizen. November 9, 1989. pg. A.1.FRO
  58. ^ "Abortion law passes by nine votes amid protests." Peggy Curran. The Gazette. May 30, 1990. pg. A.1.FRO
  59. ^ Todd, Paula (June 13, 1990). "Woman bleeds to death after aborting her fetus". Toronto Star. p. A3. ProQuest 436215831. Retrieved December 14, 2012.. A 20-year-old Toronto woman has died after performing an abortion on herself, probably with a coat hanger, police say. Yvonne Jurewicz of Westminster Ave. was found dead Monday night in her west-end apartment. An autopsy performed yesterday revealed Jurewicz bled to death after aborting, said Detective Sergeant Thomas Imrie, who is heading the investigation.
  60. ^ "Hansard -- Tuesday, June 26, 1990 -- Morning Sitting". Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. Hansard Services. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
  61. ^ "Ontario Hansard, 13 June 1990, Oral Questions, Abortion". Ontario Hansard. June 13, 1990. Retrieved December 14, 2012.
  62. ^ "Bill's loss may be blessing for Tories." Joan Ramsay. The Ottawa Citizen. February 2, 1991. pg. A.7
  63. ^ Borowski v. Canada (Attorney General), [1989] 1 SCR 342.
  64. ^ a b Tremblay v. Daigle, [1989] 2 SCR 530.
  65. ^ R. v. Sullivan, [1991] 1 SCR 489.
  66. ^ Dobson (Litigation Guardian of) v. Dobson, [1999] 2 S.C.R. 753.
  67. ^ Kamloops v. Nielsen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 2.
  68. ^ Winnipeg Child & Family Services (Northwest Area) v. G. (D.F.), [1997] 3 SCR 925.
  69. ^ "Canada abortion clinics will be open for Americans", CBC National, June 24, 2022.
  70. ^ a b c d e f Arthur, Joyce. "List of Abortion Clinics in Canada (and some hospitals)". Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada. Retrieved October 16, 2020. PDF
  71. ^ Canada Health Act, RSC 1985, c. C-6, s. 9.
  72. ^ Canada Health Act, RSC 1985, c. C-6, s. 2.
  73. ^ "The Canada Health Act: An Overview". lop.parl.ca.
  74. ^ "RU-486 abortion pill approved by Health Canada". CBC News. July 30, 2015.
  75. ^ Ubelacker, Sheryl (November 7, 2017). "Health Canada eases restrictions on abortion pill Mifegymiso". CTVNews.
  76. ^ "Abortion Services". Alberta Health Services. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  77. ^ "Abortion". myhealth.alberta.ca.
  78. ^ "Abortion Services". www.bcwomens.ca. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  79. ^ "THE PRO-CHOICE ACTION NETWORK". www.prochoiceactionnetwork-canada.org. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  80. ^ "Abortion". HealthLink BC.
  81. ^ "Abortion | Women's Health Clinic".
  82. ^ "New Brunswick abortion restriction lifted by Premier Brian Gallant". CBC News. November 26, 2014. Retrieved February 2, 2018.
  83. ^ "Clinics". Planned Parenthood - NL Sexual Health Centre. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  84. ^ "Northern Options for Women (NOW)". Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  85. ^ "Nova Scotia Women's Choice Clinic | Nova Scotia Health Authority". www.nshealth.ca. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  86. ^ "Abortion | IRespectMyself". www.irespectmyself.ca.
  87. ^ Safe Access to Abortion Services Act, 2017, S.O. 2017, c. 19, Sched. 1
  88. ^ "Abortion Services". www.princeedwardisland.ca. January 31, 2018. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  89. ^ "Abortion services". www.quebec.ca.
  90. ^ "Des avortements tardifs faits au Québec à cause de la COVID".
  91. ^ "Abortion Services". www.rqhealth.ca.
  92. ^ . MSN. Archived from the original on May 30, 2014. Retrieved June 28, 2014.
  93. ^ "Conservative Party of Canada Policy Declaration" (PDF). 2021. (PDF) from the original on May 11, 2021.
  94. ^ "Motion 312: How MPs And Ministers Voted". The Huffington Post Canada. September 27, 2012. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
  95. ^ "MP's motion on sex selection stirs abortion debate". CBC News. December 5, 2012. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  96. ^ Taylor, Stephanie (June 2, 2021). "Majority of Conservative MPs vote in favour of defeated sex-selective abortion bill". CTVNews. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  97. ^ LEGISinfo, Bill C-338, 39th Parliament, 1st Session, Parl.gc.ca July 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, Accessed September 29, 2006.
  98. ^ Mas, Susana (November 28, 2014). "Justin Trudeau says Filomena Tassi agreed to vote pro-choice if elected in 2015". CBC News. Retrieved September 12, 2020.
  99. ^ a b The Canadian Press (January 31, 2013). "Investigate some abortions as homicides, Tory MPS ask RCMP". CBC. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  100. ^ a b Tristin, Hopper (February 1, 2013). "Birth of a legal quandry[sic]: Live-birth abortions a perilous grey zone in Canada's criminal code". The National Post. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  101. ^ Vellacott, Maurice (January 23, 2013). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 6, 2013. Retrieved May 30, 2013.
  102. ^ Arthur, Joyce (2002). "How to interpret polls on abortion". Pro-choice Action Network. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  103. ^ . Angus-reid.com. Archived from the original on August 13, 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  104. ^ AngusReid Strategies (June 20, 2008). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 22, 2013. Retrieved July 4, 2009.
  105. ^ EKOS Research Associates (April 1, 2010). "Canadians Decisively Pro-Choice on Abortion" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on April 15, 2010. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  106. ^ a b c "Majority Continue to Support (77%) Abortion in Canada, But Behind Sweden (87%), Belgium (87%) and France (86%)". Ipsos. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  107. ^ Kirkey, Sharon (January 31, 2020). "As abortion debate becomes increasingly polarized, poll shows the views of many Canadians are more complicated | National Post". National Post. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  108. ^ a b c d e DART & Maru/Blue (February 1, 2020). "Abortion: A Canadian Public Perspective After Three Decades. A DART & Maru/Blue Voice Canada Pol" (PDF). DART Insight and Communications. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  109. ^ Ipsos (August 17, 2020). "Globally, seven in ten adults favor allowing abortion". IPSOS. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  110. ^ Canseco, Mario (May 9, 2022). "Most Canadians Reluctant to Re-Open Debate on Abortion". Research Co. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  111. ^ . CLCNS.com. Archived from the original on September 26, 2008. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  112. ^ "Therapeutic Abortion Survey 2006". Statcan.gc.ca. August 21, 2009. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  113. ^ "Abortionincanada.ca". Abortionincanada.ca. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  114. ^ "Home". Prolife Alberta.
  115. ^ Sites For Life - www.sitesforlife.com. "Albertaprolife.com". Albertaprolife.com. from the original on February 3, 2011. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  116. ^ "Home". We Need A Law.
  117. ^ "AbortionInCanada.ca". AbortionInCanada.ca. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  118. ^ "Actionlife.org". Actionlife.org. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  119. ^ "Thousands attend March for Life downtown". Ottawa. May 10, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  120. ^ . Vueweekly.com. January 23, 2008. Archived from the original on January 4, 2010. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  121. ^ . CBC.ca. May 21, 2009. Archived from the original on January 20, 2009. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  122. ^ a b c "Violence and harassment at U.S. abortion clinics." ReligiousTolerance.org.
  123. ^ "AMERICAS | Canada abortion doctor stabbed". BBC News. July 13, 2000. Retrieved March 10, 2011.

Further reading

  • Rachael Johnstone (September 15, 2017). After Morgentaler: The Politics of Abortion in Canada. UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-3441-4.
  • Raymond Tatalovich (May 20, 2015). The Politics of Abortion in the United States and Canada: A Comparative Study. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-45538-7.
  • Shannon Stettner (August 26, 2016). Without Apology: Writings on Abortion in Canada. Athabasca University Press. ISBN 978-1-77199-159-9.

External links

  • Richer, Karine. Abortion in Canada: Twenty years after R. v. Morgentaler. Parliament of Canada, Law and Government Division. PRB-08-22E.
  • List of abortion clinics in Canada at the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada
  • List of abortion clinics in Canada at the National Abortion Federation

abortion, canada, legal, throughout, pregnancy, publicly, funded, medical, procedure, under, combined, effects, federal, canada, health, provincial, health, care, systems, however, access, services, resources, varies, region, while, some, restrictions, exist, . Abortion in Canada is legal throughout pregnancy and is publicly funded as a medical procedure under the combined effects of the federal Canada Health Act and provincial health care systems 1 However access to services and resources varies by region 2 While some restrictions exist 1 Canada is one of the few nations with no criminal restrictions on abortion 3 4 Abortion is subject to provincial healthcare regulatory rules and guidelines for physicians 5 6 No provinces offer abortion on request at 24 weeks and beyond although there are exceptions for certain medical complications 7 8 Formally banned in 1869 abortion would remain illegal in Canadian law for the next 100 years 9 In 1969 the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1968 69 legalized therapeutic abortions as long as a committee of doctors certified that continuing the pregnancy would likely endanger the woman s life or health 9 In 1988 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in R v Morgentaler that the existing law was unconstitutional and struck down the 1969 Act 10 The ruling found that the 1969 abortion law violated a woman s right to life liberty and security of the person guaranteed under Section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms established in 1982 11 In Canada all surgical abortions are performed by a physician with nurse practitioners pharmacists and midwives able to provide medications for non invasive medical abortions within nine weeks 63 days of gestation 12 13 Canada has had a relatively stable abortion rate since decriminalization the rate of recorded abortion per 1000 women of childbearing age 15 44 was 10 2 in 1974 rising to 16 4 abortions per thousand women in 1997 and declining to 10 1 abortions per 1000 women in 2020 14 15 16 However these rates of abortion only reflect the number of abortions reported by abortion clinics and hospitals They do not account for unreported abortions in these setting or count abortions induced by prescription drugs such as mifepristone and misoprostol taken at home and so these official rates of abortion undercount the true rate of abortion 15 Nevertheless Canada has a low abortion rate overall compared to other countries 3 with approximately 74 000 abortions reported in 2020 Roughly half of abortions occur among women aged 18 to 29 years and roughly 90 of abortions are performed within the first trimester 12 weeks 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Liberalisation of abortion laws 1 2 1 Chief Coroner Shulman 1 2 2 Partial de criminalisation 1 2 3 Badgley report 1 3 Difficulties in access before decriminalization 1 4 Constitutional challenges to the abortion law 1 4 1 First Morgentaler challenge 1975 1 4 2 Second Morgentaler challenge 1988 1 5 Attempts at a new law 1 6 Later cases relating to abortion 1 7 Case law 2 Accessibility and methods 2 1 Accessibility by province and territory 3 Politics 4 Opinion polls 5 Abortion rights movement 6 Anti abortion movement 7 Violence towards abortion providers 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistoryEarly history nbsp Emily Howard Stowe was the first female physician to practise in Canada the second licensed female physician in Canada and an activist for women s rights and suffrage During the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries abortion before the quickening 15 20 weeks 18 was legal in the British North American colonies 19 However as the century progressed the United Kingdom began to pass laws which created criminal offences relating to abortion such as the Malicious Shooting or Stabbing Act 1803 that made performing or attempting to perform a post quickening abortion a death penalty offence That was followed in 1837 by the Offences Against the Person Act 1837 that removed the death penalty clause while making the procurement of any miscarriage unlawful 19 20 The British North American provinces followed the British example and began restricting abortion rights 20 Abortion was prohibited in Canada in 1869 two years after the country s formation 20 21 That prohibition was continued in the Criminal Code until 1969 Anyone who procured a miscarriage for a woman was liable to imprisonment for life while a woman who procured a miscarriage for herself was liable to imprisonment for two years 22 As in other countries illegal abortions were still performed and some cases charged that this led to the deaths of women The abortion trial of Emily Stowe 1879 is one early example 23 Another such case Azoulay v The Queen 24 reached the Supreme Court in 1952 In both cases the alleged abortion provider was ultimately acquitted of responsibility for the woman s death Abortion rights activist Marilyn Wilson former executive director of the Canadian Abortion Rights Action League says Illegal abortions were common but often of poor safety Several hundred women per year died from botched abortions 25 Liberalisation of abortion laws Chief Coroner Shulman The movement to liberalize Canada s abortion laws began in the 1960s Former Chief Coroner of Ontario Morton Shulman recalls that in the sixties abortion could be legally performed only to save the life of the woman so there were practically no legal abortions He stated that the pregnant daughters of the rich were sent to reliable physicians who did abortions for cash He estimated that these physicians did twenty to thirty abortions per week Women who were not rich were left to perform an abortion on themselves or go to what he called a nurse abortionist Their method was commonly pumping Lysol into the woman s womb The mortality rate was high and the infection rate was over 50 He added By the time I became Chief Coroner I had had the unpleasant experience of seeing the bodies of some dozens of young women who had died as a result of these amateur abortions 26 Shulman decided to publicize deaths from illegal abortions 27 He instructed his coroners to call a public inquest into each abortion death 27 He describes one case that he believes was the turning point that of 34 year old Lottie Leanne Clarke a mother of three children who died of a massive infection in 1964 after an illegal abortion in spite of medical treatment and antibiotics At the inquest into her death the jury recommended that the laws about therapeutic abortion be revised Shulman added that a federal government committee should review the question of abortion and the law Newspapers published editorials recommending the reform of the abortion law In 1965 the Minister of Justice Guy Favreau wrote to Shulman that the recommendation would be considered in the program to amend the Criminal Code The eventual amendment closely followed the recommendations of the coroners juries 26 Partial de criminalisation In 1967 Justice Minister Pierre Trudeau introduced a bill which included an amendment to the provision of the Criminal Code which prohibited abortions 28 The bill known as the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1968 69 continued the basic prohibition on abortions with the potential life sentence However the bill made an exception for abortions performed in a hospital with the approval of that hospital s three doctor therapeutic abortion committee The committee would have to certify that the pregnancy would be likely to endanger the life or health of the pregnant woman The term health was not defined and therapeutic abortion committees were free to develop their own theories as to when a likely danger to health which might include psychological health would justify a therapeutic abortion 28 This same bill also legalized homosexuality and contraception and would be the subject of one of Trudeau s most famous quotations The state has no business in the bedrooms of the nation 29 30 When he introduced the bill in 1967 Trudeau was Minister of Justice in the government of Prime Minister Lester Pearson In 1968 Pearson retired and Trudeau succeeded him as prime minister The bill did not pass before the 1968 election but was re introduced by John Turner Minister of Justice in the Trudeau government Parliament passed the bill in 1969 31 In the 1970 federal statute revision the provision was re numbered as s 251 of the Criminal Code 32 Badgley report In 1975 a Committee on the Operation of the Abortion Law was appointed to conduct a study to determine whether the procedure provided in the Criminal Code for obtaining therapeutic abortions was operating equitably across Canada and to make recommendations on the operation of this law rather than recommendations on the underlying policy The Committee known as the Badgley Committee after its Chair Dr Robin F Badgley 33 reported in January 1977 It found quite simply that the procedures set out for the operation of Abortion Law are not working equitably across Canada In large part this was because the intent of the law was neither clear nor agreed upon Access to abortion as set out in the Criminal Code was not available for many women due to variations in distribution of hospitals and doctors and in whether Therapeutic Abortion Committees were set up and in doctors interpretations of health for women ages of consent and parental notification requirements The report recommended better family planning to reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies but their main conclusion was that abortion services were not being delivered as required 34 Difficulties in access before decriminalization By 1982 there were 66 319 legal abortions in Canada 35 Interpretation of the 1969 law varied widely between doctors and hospitals leading to uneven access The standard was the physical or mental well being of the woman to be decided by a hospital s Therapeutic Abortion Committee However there was no requirement for a hospital to have a TAC to evaluate women Only about one third of hospitals had one Some committees took a liberal stance and allowed most requests while others blocked almost all requests Access to legal abortions was easy in major metropolitan areas but much harder outside large cities In the province of Prince Edward Island the lone Therapeutic Abortion Committee shut down and there were no legal abortions in the province after 1982 36 The Therapeutic Abortion Committees often took days or weeks to make their decisions pushing a pregnancy further along than it would have been otherwise The women were not seen by the committee and had no right to appeal a decision Advocates for abortion rights believed that the choice should be made by the woman rather than a panel of doctors 37 Because of the lack of facilities in smaller provinces and rural areas women were often forced to travel to major cities at their own expense In Newfoundland there was only a single gynaecologist who performed abortions Many women had to buy expensive plane tickets to Toronto or Montreal to get an abortion 35 Other women chose to travel to the United States where abortions became available at many private clinics after the Roe v Wade decision in 1973 In 1982 4 311 Canadian women travelled to the United States for an abortion 36 Constitutional challenges to the abortion law nbsp Dr Henry Morgentaler was an abortion rights advocate physician who fought numerous legal battles aimed at expanding abortion rights In defiance of the law Dr Henry Morgentaler began performing abortions at his clinic in Montreal without approval of a therapeutic abortion committee 38 He challenged the constitutionality of the abortion law on two separate occasions The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed his first constitutional challenge in 1975 brought under the division of powers and the Canadian Bill of Rights but in 1988 the Supreme Court allowed his second challenge brought under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms The Court held that the abortion law was inoperative Morgentaler eventually brought a third constitutional challenge to a provincial law restricting access to abortions He was successful in that challenge as well Morgentaler s struggle prompted a nationwide movement to reform Canada s abortion laws In 1970 as part of the Abortion Caravan 35 women chained themselves to the parliamentary gallery in the House of Commons closing Parliament for the first time in Canadian history 39 First Morgentaler challenge 1975 In 1973 Morgentaler stated publicly that he had performed 5 000 abortions without the permission of the three doctor committees even going so far as to videotape himself performing operations 40 The Crown prosecution service of Quebec prosecuted Morgentaler three times and each time juries refused to convict him despite his outright admission that he had performed many abortions The Crown appealed the first acquittal In 1974 the Quebec Court of Appeal overturned the jury s verdict of acquittal in the first case substituted a guilty verdict and returned the matter to the trial judge for sentencing 41 Morgentaler then appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada on several grounds arguing that the Criminal Code provision was unconstitutional under the division of powers the provision was inoperative under the Canadian Bill of Rights the Court of Appeal did not have the authority to overturn the jury verdict of acquittal the defence of necessity was available s 45 of the Criminal Code which provided that a medical practitioner was not criminally liable for performing surgical procedures was available as a defence In 1975 the Supreme Court dismissed his appeal by a 6 3 decision Morgentaler v The Queen 42 The Court was unanimous that the provision was valid criminal law and therefore within the constitutional authority of the federal Parliament it did not intrude on provincial jurisdiction over health The Court also held unanimously that the law did not infringe the Canadian Bill of Rights 43 The Court gave those rulings from the bench with written reasons on these points later given by Chief Justice Laskin 44 However the Court split 6 3 on the issues of necessity and s 45 of the Criminal Code which provided that a medical doctor who performed a surgery according to reasonable medical standards was immune from criminal liability Six members of the Court for reasons written by Justice Pigeon held that the Criminal Code provisions respecting Crown appeals authorised the Court of Appeal to substitute a guilty verdict 45 Six members also held for reasons given by Justice Pigeon and Justice Dickson that the defences of necessity and s 45 did not apply to the criminal offence of procuring an abortion 46 In dissent three members of the Court for reasons written by Chief Justice Laskin would have held that the defences of necessity and s 45 were available and therefore properly considered by the jury 47 As a result the Supreme Court upheld the conviction entered by the Court of Appeal and remitted the matter to the trial judge for sentencing The trial judge imposed a sentence of eighteen months imprisonment Public outcry over the decision caused the federal government to introduce an amendment to the Criminal Code commonly known as the Morgentaler Amendment taking away the jurisdiction of appeal courts to substitute a conviction for a jury s verdict of acquittal 48 49 Following the third jury acquittal the Quebec government declared that the law was unenforceable and no further charges were brought 10 Second Morgentaler challenge 1988 Upon his release from prison in Quebec Morgentaler decided to challenge the federal abortion law in other provinces Over the next ten years he opened and operated private abortion clinics across the country in direct violation of the law Following a fourth jury acquittal in 1984 the Ontario government appealed the decision The Ontario Court of Appeal set aside the acquittal and ordered a re trial 10 Morgentaler in turn appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada In a landmark decision the Supreme Court declared in 1988 the entirety of the country s abortion law to be unconstitutional R v Morgentaler 11 By a 5 2 decision the Court held that section 251 of the Criminal Code was of no force or effect because it violated section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms Section 7 states that Everyone has the right to life liberty and the security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice The Court also held that the infringement could not be justified under s 1 of the Charter which in some cases allows a government to provide a reasonable justification for an infringement There was no single majority judgment Chief Justice Dickson Justice Beetz and Justice Wilson all wrote decisions finding the law to be unconstitutional but for varying reasons in support Justice McIntyre wrote the dissenting opinion Chief Justice Dickson held that f orcing a woman by threat of criminal sanction to carry a fetus to term unless she meets certain criteria unrelated to her own priorities and aspirations infringed the woman s right to security of the person as protected by s 7 of the Charter 50 Justice Wilson found that the law asserts that the woman s capacity to reproduce is to be subject not to her own control but to that of the state which similarly breached the right to security of the person 51 10 Having found that law infringed the right to security of the person the majority then considered whether that infringement was consistent with the principles of fundamental justice which is the second branch of s 7 of the Charter The judges in the majority agreed that the procedural requirements to obtain an abortion as set forth in the law were especially troublesome Only accredited or approved hospitals could perform abortions which imposed a barrier to local access The law also specified that women wanting an abortion were required to obtain approval from a therapeutic abortion committee in a hospital The committee was composed of at least three physicians appointed by the hospital s board of members and did not include the practitioner who was to perform the procedure 52 The court found that the committee requirement was deeply flawed in part because of the long delays caused by the committees and that in many hospitals the committees were merely committees on paper and did not actually approve abortions Chief Justice Dickson held that the structure the system regulating access to therapeutic abortions is manifestly unfair It contains so many potential barriers to its own operation that the defence it creates will in many circumstances be practically unavailable to women who would prima facie qualify Noted barriers included a lack of hospitals with committees doctors who did not wish to refer matters to committees the lack of a standard meaning for health leading to inconsistent standards among committees and geographical and financial differentials in treatment He concluded the provision violated the principles of fundamental justice 53 The majority of the court in Morgentaler did not find it necessary to consider whether there was a substantive right to abortion under Section 7 Justice Wilson was of the opinion that such a right existed but the other judges in the majority made their decision on procedural grounds relating to the insufficiencies in the committee process Attempts at a new law Following the 1988 Supreme Court decision the Mulroney government made two attempts to enact a new abortion law In the spring of 1988 the government first attempted to find a compromise solution that would give easy access to abortion in the early stages of pregnancy and criminalize late term ones The motion in the House of Commons was defeated 147 to 76 voted against by both MPs who opposed easy access to abortions and those who opposed adding any abortion rules to the Criminal Code 54 The Supreme Court decision became an important issue in the 1988 federal election later that fall Both the Progressive Conservative and Liberal parties were sharply divided on the issue and neither party advanced a concrete platform on the abortion issue Prime Minister Brian Mulroney declared he was opposed to abortion on demand but gave no details on what that meant legally 55 Liberal leader John Turner stated that MPs should be allowed to vote their conscience but refused to give his own opinion on the issue NDP leader Ed Broadbent had a firm position that abortion is a medical matter not a criminal one and should be left to a woman and her doctor 56 The Mulroney government was returned in the 1988 election In 1989 the government introduced a much stricter bill in the House of Commons If enacted it would ban all abortions unless a doctor ruled the woman s life or health would be threatened Anyone found in violation of the law could be imprisoned for up to two years 57 The House of Commons passed the new bill by nine votes with the cabinet being whipped in favour and most anti abortion members supporting it 58 In June 1990 a teenager from Kitchener Ontario was injured during a botched abortion performed in a man s home Several days later a Toronto woman Yvonne Jurewicz died from a self induced coat hanger abortion 59 These cases were reported in the news and the latter case was discussed at multiple levels of government Speaking in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia New Democratic MLA Darlene Marzari pointed out For our purposes though technically speaking the bill has not been proclaimed Bill C 43 is in the minds of the public and in the minds of women now law In fact while we re dancing on the head of a pin and counting ourselves as angels a woman in Toronto has died she bled to death three weeks ago Her name was Yvonne Jurewicz she was 20 years old and was probably afraid to go to the doctor and afraid to go to the hospital after she tried to abort herself This is the sad fact of Bill C 43 While we debate the minor points of whether or not the Lieutenant Governor or the Governor General of Canada has picked it up we know that young women in this country are under the impression they will be considered criminals if they show up in an emergency ward door hemorrhaging 60 Reform Party MP Deborah Grey who supported the bill denied that this death the first known death from illegal abortion in Ontario in twenty years could have anything to do with the publicity surrounding the passing of Bill C 43 citation needed But in Ontario the connection was made Richard Johnston MPP suggested to Premier David Peterson that Ontario announce it would not start any third party prosecutions against women or doctors to prevent any further tragedies and to reassure doctors that they could go on providing services to the women of Ontario 61 A few months later the bill failed in the Senate on a tie vote Under the rules of the Senate a tie meant the measure was defeated 62 The defeat was somewhat unexpected since it was the first time since 1941 that the Senate whose members are appointed had outright defeated legislation passed by the House Eike Henner Kluge the director of the Canadian Medical Association ethics and legal affairs committee viewed that the bill was flawed ethically Kluge drafted an analysis for a Senate committee about Bill C 43 and his presentation may have swayed two votes to change resulting in a tie vote which resulted in the Senate not passing the Bill C 43 5 In the wake of the controversy surrounding passage of the Goods and Services Tax the Progressive Conservative government did not wish to provoke a contest of wills with the Senate and announced it would not re introduce the legislation The fact that no subsequent government has re visited this decision has led to the situation of Canada having no criminal abortion law Abortion is now treated like any other medical procedure governed by provincial and medical regulations Later cases relating to abortion The court in Morgentaler did not consider the question of whether the unborn were included in the everyone who have the right to life At that time another case before the courts would have raised that issue it was brought by Joe Borowski a former member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba However after the Morgentaler decision the Supreme Court held in Borowski v Canada AG that his case was moot since Morgentaler had struck down the provisions Borowski was challenging 63 Two further cases Tremblay v Daigle 64 and R v Sullivan 65 relied on the born alive rule inherited from English common law to determine that the fetus was not a person Sullivan could not be charged with murder of a fetus and Tremblay could not seek standing in court as the guardian of a fetus The 1989 Supreme Court of Canada case of Tremblay v Daigle 64 is one of the most widely publicized cases concerning abortion in Canada after the law prohibiting abortions was overturned by the Supreme Court of Canada Daigle s ex boyfriend obtained a restraining order against her having an abortion While the restraining order was issued in Quebec it was legally restricting Canada wide The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that only the woman could make the choice the man had no legal say in a woman s choice to terminate a pregnancy or carry it to completion Daigle had already had a late second term abortion before the Court ruled on her case While the case was fast tracked the progress was so slow that Daigle would have been in the third trimester had she waited for the ruling to be handed down Daigle had an abortion in the United States while the case was before the Supreme Court of Canada This was not made public until after the ruling although it was not unexpected This is in contrast to the Roe v Wade case in the United States where Roe had carried the pregnancy to term That case however was different from the Tremblay v Daigle case in that it was about whether abortion was legal In the Tremblay v Daigle case the question was whether a male partner has a say in whether a woman can obtain an abortion ruling Two further cases addressed the interest in the fetus In Dobson Litigation Guardian of v Dobson 66 a grandfather attempted to act on behalf of a child born with cerebral palsy supposedly resulting from a car accident in which the mother was the driver He attempted to sue the mother with negligence in driving The mother was in favor of the suit succeeding as it would have provided her with funds to raise her disabled child her insurance company was defending the suit through subrogation Citing the case of Kamloops v Nielsen 67 the Court decided that courts cannot impose a duty of care on a pregnant woman toward her fetus because it would interfere with the exercise of her autonomy rights during pregnancy and faced difficulty in defining a standard of care in pregnancy Only a legislature can do this In Winnipeg Child amp Family Services Northwest Area v G D F the Supreme Court determined that a pregnant woman addicted to solvents could not be civilly committed for treatment 68 Case law Abortion trial of Emily Stowe 1879 Eastview Birth Control Trial 1936 Azoulay v The Queen 1952 Morgentaler v The Queen 1976 R v Morgentaler 1988 Borowski v Canada AG 1989 Tremblay v Daigle 1989 R v Morgentaler 1993 Accessibility and methodsSurgical and non invasive medical abortions in Canada are provided on request for any reason are confidential for all ages and funded by Medicare to those who are covered by provincial territorial medical care plans depending on the province or territory this always includes Canadian citizens and permanent residents but may vary on inclusion of international students workers and protected persons or refugee claimants For those not covered by a medical care plan e g Americans in states that prohibit abortion after the decision in Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization the federal government has committed to letting them obtain abortions in Canada without restriction However this will be contingent on them being able to pay for travel costs and the procedure themselves 69 Nationally abortion is legal through all nine months 40 weeks of pregnancy 12 nevertheless no providers in Canada offer care beyond 23 weeks and 6 days 8 Restrictions are based on professional medical guidelines resources available equipment trained personnel and individual facility mandates makes access to all types of services vary by region within each province and territory 8 70 7 Each province and territory regulates and funds their own healthcare system The federal government provides funding to each province and territory provided they comply with the requirements of the Canada Health Act One of those requirements is comprehensiveness which means that all insured health services defined by the Act must be covered by a provincial or territorial health plan for that province or territory to receive federal funds 71 Abortion is not specifically mentioned in the Canada Health Act It is simply included in the broad definition of insured health services just like other medical and surgical procedures 72 One third of hospitals perform surgical abortions and these perform two thirds of surgical abortions in the country The remaining surgical abortions are performed by public and private clinics 73 Medical abortions are available in Canada using medications such as methotrexate or misoprostol and or mifepristone 12 13 Mifepristone used in combination with misoprostol brand name Mifegymiso was approved for use in Canada when prescribed by a doctor on July 29 2015 74 In 2017 the approval expanded to include prescribing abilities to nurse practitioners midwives and pharmacist based on provincial regulations 75 and it may be dispensed by pharmacists directly to the patient 13 Nationwide information is provided by advocacy associations such as the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada and National Abortion Federation that maintain detailed lists of abortion clinics by province and the maximum gestational period that the clinic will provide abortion types up to 7 70 These sites also provide information on how to obtain medication involving medical abortions how to obtain financial support for travel accommodation expenses after treatment supplies child care and various other needs 70 7 Accessibility by province and territory There is no abortion law in Canada but provincial and territorial health regulations and professional bodies restrict the procedure to various grounds or gestational limits There are also significant disparities between rural and urban access to abortion 7 8 Region Gestational limits 8 of providers 8 Notes nbsp Alberta 20 weeks 5 The province has abortion services accessible in Edmonton and Calgary 76 All abortion services are offered 77 nbsp British Columbia 23 weeks and 6 days 24 The province is governed by the Access to Abortion Services Act which limits political demonstrations outside abortion providing facilities doctor s offices and doctor s homes to set distances BC Women s Hospital amp Health Centre can provide late term abortions in Vancouver up until the 25th week of pregnancy its CARE Program 78 There are six abortion clinics throughout the province that can be accessed without a doctor referral and upwards of 30 hospitals that are required to perform abortions with a doctor s referral 79 80 nbsp Manitoba 19 weeks and 6 days 4 The province has limited access for those in rural communities Aspiration or surgical procedures are available for up to 19 weeks and 6 days Medical abortions up to 9 weeks 81 nbsp New Brunswick 16 weeks 5 New Brunswick does not use public funding to pay for abortion services outside of hospital settings This means that abortions provided in clinics are not funded by the government 82 nbsp Newfoundland and Labrador 15 weeks 4 Planned Parenthood Newfoundland and Labrador is the only sexual health clinic in the province 83 7 Full spectrum doula services 70 nbsp Northwest Territories 19 weeks and 6 days 1 Northern Options for Women abbreviated as NOW provides both medical and surgical abortion services in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut 84 nbsp Nova Scotia 16 weeks 11 In Nova Scotia there is an abortion clinic in Halifax or someone needing an abortion can call the abortion helpline for other options throughout the province that may be closer to them 85 nbsp Nunavut 12 weeks 2 All abortions must be performed in a hospital 86 nbsp Ontario 23 weeks and 6 days 38 Intimidation of and interference with patients or providers are illegal in safe access zones around abortion providing clinics and other requesting health care facilities the offices on request of providing doctors nurses pharmacists and some other providers and providers homes under the Safe Access to Abortion Services Act 2017 87 There are nine regions in Ontario where abortion is available with full spectrum doula services 70 7 nbsp Prince Edward Island 12 weeks and 6 days 1 Prince Edward Island offers in province abortions up until 12 weeks and 6 days pregnant After that limit an out of province surgical abortion would have to be performed A referral must be obtained through a PEI physician prior to any surgical procedure 88 nbsp Quebec 23 weeks and 6 days 49 The province has a multitude of options for abortion access 89 Historically late term abortions beyond 30 weeks had to be performed in the US with all expenses paid by the Quebec government This changed in 2020 because of Covid travel restrictions 90 nbsp Saskatchewan 18 weeks and 6 days 3 Few resources available to those in rural areas 91 nbsp Yukon 12 weeks and 6 days 1 Whitehorse General Hospital is the only location in Yukon available for both medical and early aspiration abortions 70 7 PoliticsAs of 2023 all federally represented political parties in Canada as well as their leaders support continued legal abortion access in Canada While elected members of the Bloc Quebecois New Democratic Party the Liberal Party of Canada and the Green Party of Canada nearly universally support abortion rights and all these parties MPs would be expected to vote against any hypothetical Bills that would restrict or limit abortion rights in any way 92 the Conservative Party of Canada has both members who favour abortion rights and members who oppose them and has stated that members would be allowed to vote their conscience on any vote concerning abortion In the past more Conservative members have been against abortion The Conservative Party has had to wrestle with combining the conflicting social policies of its two predecessor parties the moderate Progressive Conservative Party and the more right wing Canadian Alliance which merged in 2003 Many socially conservative Alliance supporters were angered at the prospect of Belinda Stronach who favoured abortion rights winning the leadership election in early 2004 while in contrast some Progressive Conservative supporters objected during the 2004 federal election to the new party s perceived openness to legislation that would restrict abortion rights In the March 2005 policy convention in a narrow vote the party voted to not introduce legislation on the subject of abortion members can still introduce private members bills on the issue although it condemns sex selective abortions 93 The party s stance on abortion is frequently voted on at the party s policy conventions Motion 312 was introduced by Conservative MP Stephen Woodworth in 2012 calling for a House of Commons committee to determine when human life begins but was defeated 203 91 94 In 2013 Conservative MP Mark Warawa introduced a motion condemning discrimination against females through sex selective abortion 95 In 2021 Conservative Cathay Wagantall introduced a private member s bill that would prohibit a medical practitioner from performing a sex selective abortion Although the bill was defeated 248 82 a majority of Conservative MPs voted in favour of the bill 96 Until recently the Liberal Party had a few anti abortion MPs such as Liberal MP Paul Steckle introduced a bill that would have made abortion after 20 weeks gestation a criminal act in June 2006 97 Current Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has required that all Liberal party candidates will have to vote according to the party s abortion rights policy since he assumed leadership of the Liberal Party in 2013 98 Although the issue of abortion rights has popped up from time to time in federal elections as a wedge issue the issue is consistently rated as a low priority for most Canadians The Christian Heritage Party of Canada claims to be Canada s only stated anti abortion federal political party but has never had a member elected to parliament On October 19 2012 anti abortion protester Patricia Maloney expressed concern over 491 cases of live birth abortions between 2000 and 2009 The finding reported to Statistics Canada did not include detailed information on how long each fetus survived after removal or how many would have been possible to save Canada unlike the United States does not specifically have a law confirming or denying the legal rights of a baby who survives abortion On January 23 2013 Conservative MPs Wladyslaw Lizon Leon Benoit and Maurice Vellacott wrote a letter requesting that the RCMP investigate how many of the 491 live birth abortions meet the definition of homicide set forth in the Criminal Code 99 100 When CBC and The Canadian Press used the phrase investigate all abortions performed after 19 weeks gestation Vellacott accused the media outlets of false reporting and acknowledged that abortion in Canada is fully legal 101 The CBC Canadian Press story was subsequently corrected 99 The move drew approval from Dr Eike Henner Kluge former director of ethics and legal affairs for the Canadian Medical Association who said that doctors should do the best they can for what is now a person in the eyes of the law However Dr Douglas Black president of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists said that the situation is not one of homicide but rather allowing fetuses to pass away depending on what the circumstances are sometimes in their mom s arms 100 Opinion pollsMain article Societal attitudes towards abortion In a poll conducted by the National Post in November 2002 78 of respondents answered yes to the question Should women have complete freedom on their decision to have an abortion 102 In an April 2006 Leger poll 34 of respondents said they found abortion immoral behind paedophilia extramarital affairs prostitution alcohol abuse sexual relations before the age of 16 pornographic films and blasphemy 103 In a June 2008 Angus Reid Strategies poll almost half of respondents 46 believe abortion should be permitted in all cases Roughly one in five Canadians 19 would subject abortion to greater restrictions than now 22 would allow the procedure only in cases such as rape incest and to save the woman s life and seven percent would only permit abortion to save the woman s life Among provinces British Columbia and Quebec have the highest percentage who are supporting abortion rights and the Prairies have the highest percentage who are anti abortion and younger wealthier and university educated respondents are more likely to uphold the legality of abortion 104 In a March 2010 EKOS poll a majority of Canadians 52 describe themselves as pro choice while just over one in four 27 describe themselves as pro life One in ten respondents 10 describe themselves as neither pro choice nor pro life and 11 did not respond 105 In an IPSOS poll conducted in 2017 77 said abortions should be permitted which is higher than the global average of 71 106 A majority of Canadians 53 said abortion should be permitted whenever a woman decides she wants to abort while 24 favoured access under only some circumstances such as when a woman has been raped 106 A further 7 believed that abortion should only be permitted when a woman s life is in danger and 5 believed the procedure should be illegal under any circumstance 11 said they were unsure 106 In a 2020 DART amp Maru Blue Voice Canada poll 75 of Canadians said they were satisfied with Canada s abortion policies and 25 were not satisfied 107 The strongest satisfaction was found in Quebec 85 followed by British Columbia 75 Ontario 72 Alberta 70 Atlantic Canada 68 and Manitoba and Saskatchewan 70 108 Satisfaction with Canada s policies were nearly identical across gender and age groups with slightly higher favourability amongst middle and high income Canadians as compared with those earning less than CDN 50 000 78 vs 74 108 In the poll 71 of Canadians said that the government should not re open the issue and just 10 said they should re open it 8 professed indifference 108 Canadians were almost equally split on whether they thought the government should even discuss creating a regulatory framework for abortion 108 70 of Canadians said they found abortion acceptable vs 10 who found it unacceptable 11 professed indifference and 10 said they didn t know 108 In a 2020 IPSOS poll support for abortion rights were slightly stronger than in 2017 59 of Canadians said that abortion should be permitted whenever a woman wants one with 18 saying it should only be permitted under limited circumstances such as after rape and 6 saying it should only be legal if the mother s life were in danger just 4 said it should not be legal under any circumstances while 13 either said they didn t know or that they preferred not to express an opinion 109 A 2022 poll by Research Co found that 44 of Canadians believe that abortion should be legal under any circumstances 37 think that abortion should be legal only under certain circumstances and 10 think that abortion should be illegal in all circumstances Support for legal abortion under any circumstances was highest in Quebec 50 then Saskatchewan and Manitoba 47 British Columbia 46 the Maritime provinces 43 Alberta 40 and Ontario 39 Support for legal abortion under any circumstances was highest among self identified NDP voters 57 followed by Liberal voters 48 and Conservative voters 32 110 Abortion rights movementThe abortion rights movement in Canada focuses on establishing abortion as a component of provincial health care plans to ensure it is available in all regions especially for those who couldn t afford it otherwise Dr Henry Morgentaler was widely seen as the one individual personifying the Canadian abortion rights movement but organizations such as the Canadian Abortion Rights Action League CARAL Canadians for Choice and the Pro Choice Action Network also contributed significantly to advancing the abortion rights movement in Canada CARAL folded and has been replaced by the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada whose focus is on the objectives mentioned above Feminist or pro feminism organizations also contribute to promote the abortion rights approach The Canadian affiliate of Planned Parenthood now known as the Canadian Federation for Sexual Health is also in favour of abortion rights and while it does refer pregnant women to abortion providers it does not have a history unlike its American counterpart of engaging in widespread litigation in favour of legalized abortion Anti abortion movement nbsp Anti abortion ad on truck Vancouver British ColumbiaThe anti abortion movement which self identifies as the pro life movement disapproves of the lack of legal restrictions on abortion in Canada and of abortions being funded by provincial health care programs 111 even if the abortion is not for therapeutic reasons A medical reason for obtaining an abortion is no longer required in Canada since the 1988 removal of abortion from the Criminal Code 112 113 The anti abortion movement in Canada is represented by the Catholic Church Prolife Alberta 114 The Wilberforce Project 115 Campaign Life Coalition REAL Women of Canada We Need A Law 116 Abortion in Canada 117 Action Life Ottawa Inc 118 among other organizations Anti abortion rallies or Marches for Life occur annually in Ottawa and in some provincial capitals drawing thousands of people 119 although many of these marches were cancelled because of the COVID 19 pandemic Violence towards abortion providersFurther information Abortion related violence In 1983 Henry Morgentaler was attacked by a man wielding garden shears the attack was blocked by feminist activist Judy Rebick who was standing nearby 120 In 1992 Morgentaler s Toronto clinic was firebombed and sustained severe damage The event occurred at night so no one was injured although a nearby bookstore was damaged Appointments were switched to another clinic in Toronto and no abortions were prevented 121 On November 8 1994 Vancouver doctor Garson Romalis was shot in the leg 122 On November 10 1995 Dr Hugh Short of Ancaster Ontario was shot in the elbow 122 On November 11 1997 Dr Jack Fainman of Winnipeg was shot in the shoulder 122 On July 11 2000 Dr Garson Romalis was stabbed by an unidentified assailant in the lobby of his clinic 123 See also nbsp Canada portal nbsp Feminism portalAbortion laws by country Abortion debate Abortion rights movements Anti abortion movement Feminism in Canada History of Canadian women Human rights in Canada Women s suffrage in CanadaReferences a b J Cherie Strachan Lori M Poloni Staudinger Shannon Jenkins Candice D Ortbals 2019 Why Don t Women Rule the World Understanding Women s Civic and Political Choices SAGE Publications p 115 ISBN 978 1 5443 1727 4 Sethna Christabelle Doull Marion 2013 Spatial disparities and travel to freestanding abortion clinics in Canada Women s Studies International Forum Elsevier BV 38 52 62 doi 10 1016 j wsif 2013 02 001 ISSN 0277 5395 a b Sally Sheldon Kaye Wellings March 2020 Decriminalising Abortion in the UK What Would It Mean Policy Press pp 104 105 ISBN 978 1 4473 5401 7 Christine Ammer JoAnn E Manson February 2009 The Encyclopedia of Women s Health Infobase Publishing p 7 ISBN 978 0 8160 7407 5 Retrieved November 28 2011 Shannon Stettner Kristin Burnett Travis Hay eds December 1 2017 Abortion History Politics and Reproductive Justice after Morgentaler UBC Press p 224 ISBN 978 0 7748 3576 3 OCLC 1013541249 Sheldon Sally Wellings Kaye eds March 23 2020 Decriminalising Abortion in the UK What Would It Mean Policy Press pp 107 ISBN 978 1 4473 5402 4 OCLC 1145588167 a b c d e f g h Abortion Coverage by Region National Abortion Federation Canada a b c d e f Access at a Glance Abortion Services in Canada Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights Action Canada for Sexual Health amp Rights While abortions after 20 weeks are statistically very rare lt 2 5 of all abortions there are people in Canada who require abortion beyond 20 weeks for serious and important reasons There are only three service locations in Canada that offer abortion up to 23 weeks and 6 days one in British Columbia one in Southern Ontario and one in Quebec No providers in Canada offer abortion care beyond 23 weeks and 6 days a b Victoria Bromley 2012 Feminisms Matter Debates Theories Activism University of Toronto Press pp 26 32 ISBN 978 1 4426 0502 2 a b c d Radha Jhappan 2002 Women s Legal Strategies in Canada University of Toronto Press pp 335 338 ISBN 978 0 8020 7667 0 a b R v Morgentaler 1988 1 SCR 30 a b c Love4Life Methods a b c Dunn Sheila Brooks Melissa 2018 Mifepristone Canadian Medical Association Journal 190 22 E688 doi 10 1503 cmaj 180047 PMC 5988520 PMID 29866894 Government of Canada Statistics Canada October 25 2010 Pregnancy outcomes live births induced abortions and fetal loss www150 statcan gc ca Retrieved May 5 2022 a b Canadian Institute for Health Information Induced Abortions Reported in Canada in 2020 Shaw Dorothy Norman Wendy V 2020 When there are no abortion laws A case study of Canada PDF Best Practice amp Research Clinical Obstetrics amp Gynaecology 62 49 62 doi 10 1016 j bpobgyn 2019 05 010 PMID 31281015 S2CID 181481915 Statistics Abortion in Canada PDF Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada Statistics Canada 2020 Levene Malcolm et al Essentials of Neonatal Medicine Blackwell 2000 page 8 Retrieved 2007 02 15 a b Saurette P Gordon K 2016 The Changing Voice of the Anti Abortion Movement The Rise of Pro Woman Rhetoric in Canada and the United States University of Toronto Press pp 92 97 ISBN 978 1 4426 6876 8 Retrieved June 4 2023 a b c Stephanie Paterson June 2014 Fertile Ground Exploring Reproduction in Canada MQUP p 234 ISBN 978 0 7735 9212 4 An Act respecting Offences against the Person SC 1869 c 20 s 59 60 Criminal Code SC 1953 54 c 51 s 237 1 2 Section 237 1 provided Every one who with intent to procure the miscarriage of a female person whether or not she is pregnant uses any means for the purpose of carrying out his intention is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for life Constance B Backhouse The Celebrated Abortion Trial of Dr Emily Stowe Toronto 1879 Canadian Bulletin of Medical History Bulletin canadien d histoire de la medecine Volume 8 1991 pages 159 187 Azoulay v The Queen 1952 2 S C R 495 Three decades of choice Canada s landmark abortion law is 30 years old tomorrow Marilyn Wilson The Gazette May 13 1999 pg B 3 a b Shulman Morton Coroner pp 58 61 Fitzhenry amp Whiteside 1975 a b Kaevan Gazdar 2016 Feminism s Founding Fathers The Men Who Fought for Women s Rights John Hunt Publishing p 148 ISBN 978 1 78099 161 0 a b I Morgan P Davies 2008 The Federal Nation Perspectives on American Federalism Springer p 227 ISBN 978 0 230 61725 4 Shannon Stettner Kristin Burnett Travis Hay December 1 2017 Abortion History Politics and Reproductive Justice after Morgentaler UBC Press pp 76 ISBN 978 0 7748 3576 3 Trudeau s Omnibus Bill Challenging Canadian Taboos TV clip Canada CBC December 21 1967 Criminal Law Amendment Act 1968 69 SC 1968 69 c 38 Criminal Code RSC 1970 c C 34 s 251 ROBIN BADGLEY Obituary 2012 Toronto Star www legacy com Dunsmuir Mollie Abortion Constitutional and Legal Developments Section D The Badgley Report Government of Canada Law and Government Division a b Abortions more difficult to obtain groups say Women must travel borrow for procedure Ann Rauhala The Globe and Mail Toronto Ont January 30 1987 pg A 1 a b Abortion access widely varies across Canada Joan Bryden The Ottawa Citizen January 30 1988 pg B 6 Continue clinic abortions despite law group urges The Globe and Mail March 17 1982 pg P 8 Nancy Lewis Isabel Dyck Sara McLafferty 2001 Geographies of Women s Health Place Diversity and Difference SUNY Press pp 92 94 ISBN 978 0 203 18602 2 Marian Sawer June 24 2008 Women s movements flourishing or in abeyance Psychology Press p 54 ISBN 978 0 415 46245 7 Retrieved November 28 2011 Robin Stevenson 2019 My Body My Choice The Fight for Abortion Rights Orca Book Publishers p 72 ISBN 978 1 4598 1714 2 Regina v Morgentaler No 5 1974 CanLII 1369 QC CA Morgentaler v The Queen 1976 1 SCR 616 Canadian Bill of Rights SC 1960 c 44 Morgentaler v The Queen pp 624 637 Morgentaler v The Queen pp 661 670 Pigeon 685 Dickson concurring Morgentaler v The Queen pp 659 660 671 Pigeon pp 675 681 Dickson Morgentaler v The Queen pp 642 655 A crusader s legacy How Henry Morgentaler changed Canada s laws cbc ca Now found in the Criminal Code RSC 1985 c C 46 s 686 4 b R v Morgentaler p 63 R v Morgentaler p 173 R v Morgentaler pp 65 66 R v Morgentaler pp 66 72 Abortion motions rejected Govt given little help on new law Stephen Bindman The Ottawa Citizen July 29 1988 pg A 1 FRO Silence broken PM is opposed to abortion on demand Heather Bird Toronto Star August 3 1988 pg A 1 PM Opposition leader vague on abortion law Portia Priegert The Vancouver Sun October 26 1988 pg B 4 Turner admits abortion bill may be best we can get Iain Hunter The Ottawa Citizen November 9 1989 pg A 1 FRO Abortion law passes by nine votes amid protests Peggy Curran The Gazette May 30 1990 pg A 1 FRO Todd Paula June 13 1990 Woman bleeds to death after aborting her fetus Toronto Star p A3 ProQuest 436215831 Retrieved December 14 2012 A 20 year old Toronto woman has died after performing an abortion on herself probably with a coat hanger police say Yvonne Jurewicz of Westminster Ave was found dead Monday night in her west end apartment An autopsy performed yesterday revealed Jurewicz bled to death after aborting said Detective Sergeant Thomas Imrie who is heading the investigation Hansard Tuesday June 26 1990 Morning Sitting Legislative Assembly of British Columbia Hansard Services Retrieved July 14 2019 Ontario Hansard 13 June 1990 Oral Questions Abortion Ontario Hansard June 13 1990 Retrieved December 14 2012 Bill s loss may be blessing for Tories Joan Ramsay The Ottawa Citizen February 2 1991 pg A 7 Borowski v Canada Attorney General 1989 1 SCR 342 a b Tremblay v Daigle 1989 2 SCR 530 R v Sullivan 1991 1 SCR 489 Dobson Litigation Guardian of v Dobson 1999 2 S C R 753 Kamloops v Nielsen 1984 2 S C R 2 Winnipeg Child amp Family Services Northwest Area v G D F 1997 3 SCR 925 Canada abortion clinics will be open for Americans CBC National June 24 2022 a b c d e f Arthur Joyce List of Abortion Clinics in Canada and some hospitals Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada Retrieved October 16 2020 PDF Canada Health Act RSC 1985 c C 6 s 9 Canada Health Act RSC 1985 c C 6 s 2 The Canada Health Act An Overview lop parl ca RU 486 abortion pill approved by Health Canada CBC News July 30 2015 Ubelacker Sheryl November 7 2017 Health Canada eases restrictions on abortion pill Mifegymiso CTVNews Abortion Services Alberta Health Services Retrieved October 16 2020 Abortion myhealth alberta ca Abortion Services www bcwomens ca Retrieved October 16 2020 THE PRO CHOICE ACTION NETWORK www prochoiceactionnetwork canada org Retrieved October 16 2020 Abortion HealthLink BC Abortion Women s Health Clinic New Brunswick abortion restriction lifted by Premier Brian Gallant CBC News November 26 2014 Retrieved February 2 2018 Clinics Planned Parenthood NL Sexual Health Centre Retrieved October 16 2020 Northern Options for Women NOW Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority Retrieved October 16 2020 Nova Scotia Women s Choice Clinic Nova Scotia Health Authority www nshealth ca Retrieved October 16 2020 Abortion IRespectMyself www irespectmyself ca Safe Access to Abortion Services Act 2017 S O 2017 c 19 Sched 1 Abortion Services www princeedwardisland ca January 31 2018 Retrieved October 16 2020 Abortion services www quebec ca Des avortements tardifs faits au Quebec a cause de la COVID Abortion Services www rqhealth ca Anti abortion Candidates need not apply MSN Archived from the original on May 30 2014 Retrieved June 28 2014 Conservative Party of Canada Policy Declaration PDF 2021 Archived PDF from the original on May 11 2021 Motion 312 How MPs And Ministers Voted The Huffington Post Canada September 27 2012 Retrieved October 2 2012 MP s motion on sex selection stirs abortion debate CBC News December 5 2012 Retrieved December 22 2021 Taylor Stephanie June 2 2021 Majority of Conservative MPs vote in favour of defeated sex selective abortion bill CTVNews Retrieved December 22 2021 LEGISinfo Bill C 338 39th Parliament 1st Session Parl gc ca Archived July 14 2006 at the Wayback Machine Accessed September 29 2006 Mas Susana November 28 2014 Justin Trudeau says Filomena Tassi agreed to vote pro choice if elected in 2015 CBC News Retrieved September 12 2020 a b The Canadian Press January 31 2013 Investigate some abortions as homicides Tory MPS ask RCMP CBC Retrieved May 26 2013 a b Tristin Hopper February 1 2013 Birth of a legal quandry sic Live birth abortions a perilous grey zone in Canada s criminal code The National Post Retrieved May 26 2013 Vellacott Maurice January 23 2013 Letter to RCMP commissioner to investigate born alive babies PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 6 2013 Retrieved May 30 2013 Arthur Joyce 2002 How to interpret polls on abortion Pro choice Action Network Retrieved May 26 2013 Canadians Examine What Is Immoral June 15 2006 Angus reid com Archived from the original on August 13 2007 Retrieved March 10 2011 AngusReid Strategies June 20 2008 Canadians Uphold Abortion Policy Split on Health Care System s Role PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 22 2013 Retrieved July 4 2009 EKOS Research Associates April 1 2010 Canadians Decisively Pro Choice on Abortion PDF Archived PDF from the original on April 15 2010 Retrieved May 3 2010 a b c Majority Continue to Support 77 Abortion in Canada But Behind Sweden 87 Belgium 87 and France 86 Ipsos Retrieved April 4 2020 Kirkey Sharon January 31 2020 As abortion debate becomes increasingly polarized poll shows the views of many Canadians are more complicated National Post National Post Retrieved April 4 2020 a b c d e DART amp Maru Blue February 1 2020 Abortion A Canadian Public Perspective After Three Decades A DART amp Maru Blue Voice Canada Pol PDF DART Insight and Communications Retrieved August 31 2020 Ipsos August 17 2020 Globally seven in ten adults favor allowing abortion IPSOS Retrieved August 31 2020 Canseco Mario May 9 2022 Most Canadians Reluctant to Re Open Debate on Abortion Research Co Retrieved May 9 2022 CLCNS com CLCNS com Archived from the original on September 26 2008 Retrieved March 10 2011 Therapeutic Abortion Survey 2006 Statcan gc ca August 21 2009 Retrieved March 10 2011 Abortionincanada ca Abortionincanada ca Retrieved March 10 2011 Home Prolife Alberta Sites For Life www sitesforlife com Albertaprolife com Albertaprolife com Archived from the original on February 3 2011 Retrieved March 10 2011 Home We Need A Law AbortionInCanada ca AbortionInCanada ca Retrieved March 10 2011 Actionlife org Actionlife org Retrieved March 10 2011 Thousands attend March for Life downtown Ottawa May 10 2018 Retrieved December 22 2021 Vueweekly com Vueweekly com January 23 2008 Archived from the original on January 4 2010 Retrieved March 10 2011 CBC ca CBC ca May 21 2009 Archived from the original on January 20 2009 Retrieved March 10 2011 a b c Violence and harassment at U S abortion clinics ReligiousTolerance org AMERICAS Canada abortion doctor stabbed BBC News July 13 2000 Retrieved March 10 2011 Further readingRachael Johnstone September 15 2017 After Morgentaler The Politics of Abortion in Canada UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 3441 4 Raymond Tatalovich May 20 2015 The Politics of Abortion in the United States and Canada A Comparative Study Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 45538 7 Shannon Stettner August 26 2016 Without Apology Writings on Abortion in Canada Athabasca University Press ISBN 978 1 77199 159 9 External linksRicher Karine Abortion in Canada Twenty years after R v Morgentaler Parliament of Canada Law and Government Division PRB 08 22E List of abortion clinics in Canada at the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada List of abortion clinics in Canada at the National Abortion Federation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abortion in Canada amp oldid 1192876231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.