Abortion in the Netherlands

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abortion
History of abortion
Methods

Surgical:
Suction-Aspiration · D&E

D&C* · IDX*
Hysterotomy* · Instillation*

Medical:
Mifepristone · Misoprostol
*Rarely performed

Abortion law

Abortion by country

Conscience clause · Minors
Legal protection of access

Reproductive rights

Abortion case law:
R v Davidson
R. v. Morgentaler
Roe v. Wade

Debate

Pro-choice · Pro-life

Social issues

Breast cancer hypothesis
Legalization and crime effect
CPCs · Fetal pain
Fetal rights · Paternal rights
Post-abortion syndrome
Religion
Selective abortion, infanticide
Self-induced · Unsafe abortion
Violence

Related:

Abortifacient · Feticide
Selective reduction · Miscarriage

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Life in the Netherlands

Cuisine
Culture
Customs
Demographics
Economy
Education
Holidays
Languages
Media
Politics
Religion
Sport
Taxation
Transport
Specific policies:
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Abortion in the Netherlands is currently legal on demand with a five-day waiting period.

Abortion was deemed illegal under the Penal Code of 1886. Convictions were all but precluded, however, by a requirement that the prosecution prove that the fetus had been alive until the abortion. The Morality Acts of 1911 closed this loophole and strictly barred all abortions except those performed to save the life of the pregnant woman.

Legalization reached the forefront of public debate in the Netherlands during the 1970s as many other Western European countries liberalized their laws. The Staten-Generaal, however, was unable to reach a consensus between those opposing legalization, those in favor of allowing abortion on demand and those favoring a compromise measure. A far-reaching, controversial abortion law was passed in 1981 that left abortion a crime, unless performed at a clinic or hospital that is issued an official abortion certificate by the Dutch government, and the woman who is asking for the abortion declares she considers it an emergency situation. Currently, there are a little over one hundred Dutch general hospitals certified to perform abortions, and twenty-three specialized abortion clinics.

In the Netherlands, abortion performed by a certified clinic or hospital is effectually allowed at any point between conception and viability, subject to counseling and a five-day waiting period. In practice, abortions are performed until approximately 24 weeks into pregnancy, although this limit is the topic of ongoing discussion among physicians in the Netherlands, since nowadays a fetus is sometimes considered viable prior to 24 weeks. As a result of this debate, hardly any abortions are performed after 22 weeks of pregnancy. Abortions after the first trimester must be performed in a hospital.

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