A 12-Year-Old Girl Was Forced To Go To Court Just To Get An Abortion
The case of a 12-year-old girl who was forced to go to court to secure an abortion has forced one MP to act.
Independent Queensland MP Rob Pyne says he will introduce a bill to decriminalise abortion in the state after a 12-year-old was forced to go to the Supreme Court in order to terminate her pregnancy.
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The girl, known only as "Q", is nine weeks pregnant and has a history of mental health issues and suicidal thoughts. The court heard she has struggled to adjust following her parents' recent separation and is finding pregnancy "very stressful emotionally".
Q spent a month speaking to a general practitioner, a social worker at a public hospital on several occasions, two specialist obstetricians, and a psychiatrist, who all supported her decision to terminate the pregnancy. The decision to terminate also has the full support of Q's parents and Queensland's Department of Communities, Child Safety and Disability Services.
However, because she's a minor, health workers still needed to seek permission from the state's Supreme Court to administer drugs which would cause an abortion.
McMeekin noted that without an abortion, the girl faced significant physical and emotional risks, and that an abortion was "clearly in Q's best interests."
In an order published on Tuesday, judge Duncan McMeekin granted permission for the girl to take the drugs Mifepristone and Misoprostol, which should result in a miscarriage. If the drugs don't work, Q will undergo surgery to complete the termination.
Advocates say Queensland's abortion laws, which date back to 1899, force vulnerable women to jump through hoops in order to procure a termination.
Abortion remains a criminal offence in Queensland unless the procedure is performed to prevent serious danger to the woman's physical or mental health.
Amanda Bradley, Manager of Children By Choice, a Brisbane-based non-profit organisation which provides pregnancy information for women, says Queensland's patchwork abortion regulations make life incredibly difficult for women seeking an abortion through the public health system.
"It's incredibly stressful. There's no clean system. There's no straightforward [method of procuring an abortion] in every hospital," she said.
"This impacts on very vulnerable women, and these are the women that most often choose to go through the public system. They've often got experience with domestic violence, sexual assault, severe mental illness, complex health issues and poverty.
"And those women have an absolute terrible time trying to get access to an abortion," she said.
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Independent MP Rob Pyne said Q's case is an "absolute disgrace", and he'll be bringing forward legislation to decriminalise abortion when Queensland parliament returns in May.
Tony Gorell