Supporting Someone Experiencing Reproductive Coercion

Supporting Someone Experiencing Reproductive Coercion

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If you, or someone you know, is experiencing pressure to have a baby, an abortion, or to keep a baby (regardless of your wishes), this is reproductive coercion. There are several things that may help support someone navigating this:

 

  1. Recognise and label it for what it is. ‘It sounds like you’re being pressured, threatened, or coerced into having a baby or getting rid of your baby’.
  2. Gently explore what is wanted. ‘What is it that you actually want for yourself and your future?’
  3. Refer them to this blog on ways that other women have resisted reproductive coercion.
  4. Consider if reproductive coercion is part of a pattern of DV, and whether other services (such as DV support, or even just connecting with their doctor) could be helpful. And, coercive control within relationships is a crime, so notifying police may form part of the picture, too.
  5. If you work in healthcare:
  • Some women have flagged that getting asked if there is coercion to start or continue a pregnancy would be helpful.
  • Some women have raised that having a doctor volunteer and discuss non-detectable contraception with them would be helpful.
  • A small number of women (3%) informed that having their doctors ask them if their birth control was being sabotaged would be helpful¹.

Being aware of what reproductive coercion looks like is half the battle. It’s not just a partner wanting commitment or over-zealous family or in-laws. It’s not just misplaced love and caring. It breaches your rights to make your family planning decisions freely, and is abusive – particularly when it is tied up in strong emotions and close relationships.

 

Every woman needs to know what reproductive coercion is.

No woman should experience this.

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