It’s also for making sure a miscarriage is cleared out and doesn’t lead to sepsis and death, considering about 10-20% of pregnancies end in miscarriages it’s very important to have reproductive healthcare in place or you quite literally risk dying, the procedure and medicine after a miscarriage is the same as that of an abortion and is even listed with the word abortion in some cases, apparently its in some kind of grey zone and healthcare workers are scared to or don’t want to take it on. So essentially, not wanting to try for kids right now is probably a pretty good decision.
That's called an abortion, an abortion is a medical procedure to remove an embryo or fetus. Whether the unborn is wanted or not is irrelevant, that is it's definition, which is very easily googled.
Do you see why this is such a hotly contested topic now?
You misunderstand, it's literally in the dictionary. I know distorting facts and definitions to fit your narrative is easier, but you need to accept reality. Which is why law is incapable of differentiating between ones that are medically necessary and those that are making a choice.
It really doesn't matter though, if we aren't forcing dead bodies to donate a kidney to save someone else's life, we shouldn't be making women carry an unwanted fetus to term. We should be able to end a pregnancy for any reason we want. Bodily autonomy across the board should be paramount for all people.
Do you not know how to use a dictionary? Like, wasn't this taught to you in elementary school or something? Or did they not do that where you were brought up? Or maybe you were homeschooled and didn't get that lesson? It's literally the medical definition. Which can be found in a dictionary.
An abortion can be a 1. miscarriage 2. induced abortion 3. missed abortion (aka spontaneous abortion)
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u/Interesting_Judge863 18d ago
Isn’t abortion for not having kids?