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Journal Article

Citation

Teklehaimanot KI, Smith CH. Med. Law 2004; 23(1): 91-102.

Affiliation

International Program of Reproductive and Sexual Health Law, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, International Centre of Medicine and Law)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15163078

Abstract

A number of countries adopt abortion laws recognizing rape as a legal ground for access to safe abortion service. As rape is a crime, these abortion laws carry with them criminal and health care elements that in turn result in the involvement of legal and medical expertise. The most common objective of the laws should be providing safe abortion services to women survivors of rape. Depending on purposes of a given abortion law, the laws usually require women to undergo a medical examination to qualify for a legal abortion. Some abortion laws are so vague as to result in uncertainties regarding the steps health personnel must follow in conducting medical examination. Another group of abortion laws do not leave room for regulation and remain too rigid to respond to changing socio-economic circumstances. Still others require medical examination as a prerequisite for abortion. As a result, a number of abortion laws remain on the books. The paper attempts to analyze legal and practical issues related to medical examination in rape cases.


Language: en

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