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Abortions surge past record 250,000 in a single year

 

A record 252,122 abortions were recorded in England and Wales in 2022, with Britain's cost of living crisis to blame, according to charities.

This figure is about 17 per cent higher than the previous year, itself another record breaker since the Abortion Act was introduced in the 60s.

It's equivalent to one in every 50 women in England and Wales between the age of 15 to 44 having a termination.

Women aged 22 were the most likely to have an abortion in 2022, at almost 38 terminations, per 1,000 women nearly double the national average.

Charities said the 'unprecedented' spike in pregnancies in ending termination was the cost of living making it unaffordable for many women to have a child.

Official abortion data, published by the Department of Health and Social Care, also recorded that 82 per cent of women who had terminations were unmarried, a figure that has remained constant for the past decade.

Women in the North West had the highest rate of abortion, at 24.2 terminations per 1,000 women.

In contrast, the South West has the lowest rate at 17.6 abortions per 1,000 women.

The vast majority, 88 per cent, of abortions performed in 2022 were performed under 10 weeks.

Such terminations can be carried out at home using medications and this has become an increasingly frequent way to end a pregnancy in the UK, with 61 per cent of terminations done this way according to Government data.

This is up 9 percentage points compared to the previous year's figure.

Current rules mean pregnant women can legally request an abortion in the UK until 24 weeks pregnant, but it is up to medics if it is granted.

Under the 1967 Abortion Act terminations are granted on grounds of physical or mental health as well as for financial reasons, such as being unable to afford to care for a child.

There is no access to abortion on demand in the UK. A woman cannot legally terminate a pregnancy without cause, she must have reason.

Abortions can still legally be carried out after the 24-week limit, but this is only done under very strict circumstances.

These include the mother's life being at risk from the pregnancy or if the child would be born with a severe disability.

Abortions carried out after 24 weeks account for a tiny fraction of total terminations.

260 abortions of this kind were carried out in 2022, 0.1 per cent of the total.

Down's syndrome charities also condemned the fact that 760 pregnancies where the disability was detected in prenatal screening , ended in termination.

Lynn Murray, spokesperson for the campaign group Don’t Screen Us Out campaign, and mother of child with Down’s syndrome said the figure was 'deeply concerning'.

'Despite the leaps that advocacy groups have made in raising awareness in support of people with Down’s syndrome, abortion in the case of Down’s syndrome is still so commonplace and widespread in the UK.

'In fact, we hear from parents all the time how abortion was repeatedly presented to them in the hospital as an obvious solution following the receipt of the news that their baby had Down’s syndrome.'

 


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