Many of us have had difficulty watching our neighbours to the south construct new legal barriers in an effort to limit women’s access to abortion in that country, but few of us have the investment in this issue that our colleague Dr Suzanne Newman does. Dr Newman is a family physician who lives and works in Winnipeg, Man. Her remarkable story helps to demonstrate how far Canada has come on this issue.
Dr Newman first got involved in this issue in 1983, before her medical school days. Dr Henry Morgentaler had just opened an abortion clinic a block away from her home. Dr Newman was walking home from shopping with her 2 small children and she saw a protest outside of the clinic with dozens of people holding signs and shouting at the women inside the clinic. Dr Newman felt she could not just walk by the scene, so she walked through the crowd with her children, up to the front steps of the clinic, and started to shout back at the demonstrators. The women inside witnessed what was developing outside, opened the door, and pulled her in. Her life would never be the same.
Dr Newman started to volunteer at the clinic, sometimes escorting patients into the clinic, sometimes working as a receptionist. In 1983, abortions performed outside of hospitals and away from their therapeutic abortion committees were not legal in Canada. I’ve heard Dr Newman describe when the police kicked open the front door, knocking over one of the volunteers. They raided the clinic and arrested everybody inside. Dr Newman and her colleagues were kept in jail cells at the Winnipeg Remand Centre for 3 nights. She says the time spent behind locked steel doors was chilling, but it did nothing to diminish her commitment to the cause.
Dr Newman identified that one of the barriers to access to abortion was a lack of doctors who were willing to provide the service. She decided to go back to school to become a doctor. A few years later she entered medical school at the age of 41, with 4 children at home cheering her on. She eventually became a family physician with a general family practice that included obstetrics. She also worked at Morgentaler Clinic and Women’s Hospital providing abortions. She is now in her 70s and has retired from her general family practice, but she still provides abortion services at Women’s Health Clinic in Winnipeg. She has always been a vocal champion of abortion services in an effort to combat the stigma around the procedure. She knows that it is a very difficult time for every woman she sees. She thinks it is very important for those women to feel safe, assured, and respected. She has dedicated her professional life to ensuring that is the case, even when the police are banging on the door.
Even after the Supreme Court struck down the anti-abortion law in 1988, times were still tense for doctors who provided abortions. Abortion providers were being shot in both Canada and the United States, including a doctor in Winnipeg. All of the abortion providers in Winnipeg were visited by the police to counsel them with regard to their personal safety. Several of the doctors decided to stop offering the service. Dr Newman believed that it was more important than ever for her to continue. Her only concession to the terror was to wear a bulletproof vest during her daily cycle to work. For many of us, when the time comes for us to wear a bullet-proof vest to work, we stop going to work.
During a recent conversation, Dr Newman pointed out that abortion services are still not as accessible as they should be, especially in rural and northern communities, in part because very few family physicians in Canada prescribe the abortion pill, the mifepristone and misoprostol combination. She asked me why I thought that was. I wasn’t sure how to answer. The pill is effective up to 9 weeks’ gestation and it is safer than a surgical abortion. It has been used in France since 1988 but is new to Canada, just available here since 2017. Health Canada recently relaxed the rules,1 so a dating ultrasound is no longer required. I think the main reason so few family doctors prescribe it is a lack of familiarity. Because it is new, very few family doctors would have received training in their residency. In many family practices, it also represents a low-volume need, so the push to pursue the appropriate continuing professional development would be infrequent.
To address the education deficit, the CFPC has promoted an online Medical Abortion Training Program. We also host a webpage with comprehensive information (www.cfpc.ca/ProjectAssets/Templates/Category.aspx?id=12368&terms=abortion) and provide dedicated education sessions at Family Medicine Forum. All of that is positive, but looking across the table at Dr Newman, I acknowledged that more needs to be done. I know that family physicians across Canada will take up this challenge. We will educate ourselves to serve the needs of all members of our communities.
Dr Newman provides an extraordinary example of courage and dedication. The rest of us must pick up the baton and ensure that all Canadian women have access to the health care services they need, including medical abortions.
Footnotes
Cet article se trouve aussi en français à la page 670.
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Reference
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