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American social media content and the powerful U.S. pro-life lobby are fueling stigmatization perceptions among Australian young people who may wish to seek out and use safe abortion services, a national study has found.
Along with improved abortion-related knowledge and community education, there is a clear need for more education and rational normalized conversations about abortion care in Australia, says Flinders University researcher Kari Vallury, who will present some of the findings from the "Australian Abortion Stigma Study" at the Abortion Conference 2022 Reproductive Rights this month (4–5 August).
"Our online survey received more than 70,000 responses, making it the largest ever, and begins to fill the gaps in limited understanding about abortion stigma in Australia to date," says Ph.D. candidate Ms. Vallury, who is also Senior Research Assistant with not-for-profit pro-choice pregnancy support service Children by Choice, which is running the Brisbane conference.
"International research shows abortion stigma leads to poorer social and mental health outcomes for abortion seekers, and can cause them to avoid seeking health care. It even deters health professionals from offering abortion services, limiting its availability in much of Australia."
The online survey measuring abortion attitudes, beliefs, knowledge, stigma and personal characteristics was developed with input from eight national and global experts and statistically weighted to ensure geographic and voting preferences align with Australian averages.
So far, the study found:
Further in-depth interviews with 20 young Australians found many factors affected their anticipation of abortion stigma, including:
"Some of the protective factors that can help to combat abortion stigma include normalizing abortion conversations, at home, at school and in the media, and providing young people with the right information about providing safe and accessible abortion services, their safety, commonality and how to access them," says Ms. Vallury.
She also suggests that it's important to address overarching drivers of stigma, such as laws, policies, a lack of abortion services, and social discourse which stereotypes and discriminates against people who have and provide abortions. + Explore further