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New abortion case sparks renewed calls for Government to reinstate in-person abortion appointments

Right To Life UK has called on the Government to reinstate in-person appointments before all abortions take place to ensure that the gestation of babies can be accurately assessed, following a woman appearing in court after being charged with procuring an abortion.

This morning, Bethany Cox, 22, appeared at Teesside Crown Court in Middlesbrough.

Cox denied taking a drug on 6 July 2020 with intent to destroy the life of a child that was capable of being born alive in the knowledge it would lead to the termination of the pregnancy. 

Although the latest guidance from the British Association of Perinatal Medicine enables doctors to intervene to save premature babies from 22 weeks, under the Infant Life Preservation Act, a baby is considered to be capable of being born alive from 28 weeks gestation.

If the baby were beyond 28 weeks gestation when the abortion took place on 6 July 2020, the baby would have been at least 13 weeks gestation when the first lockdown was announced on 23 March 2020. Abortions for babies beyond 10 weeks gestation continued to be available from abortion providers throughout the lockdown. 

The second alleged offence was administering a poison with intent to procure a miscarriage, between 2 July and 7 July 2020.

There has not been further information reported on the circumstances surrounding the case, although the information available indicates that she performed her own medical abortion using abortion pills. 

After extensive lobbying from abortion providers, medical abortions using abortion pills were made available from abortion providers such as BPAS and MSI Reproductive Choices without an in-person appointment during the pandemic.

A seven-day trial has been scheduled to start on 15 January 2024.

This case follows a trial held earlier this year, where Carla Foster, 44, used the British Pregnancy Advisory Service’s (BPAS) ‘DIY’ abortion scheme to obtain abortion pills during lockdown when she was 32-34 weeks pregnant.

BPAS lobbied for in-person appointments to be removed despite evidence that this could result in late-term abortions taking place at home

In-person appointments had previously been required ahead of a medical abortion taking place, but BPAS successfully lobbied the Government to have them removed during the pandemic.

It then became clear that women were not accurately estimating their gestational age at home, along with a number of other safeguarding issues arising with at-home abortion schemes. 

Medical professionals, 70% of respondents to a Government consultation and MPs, including Miriam Cates who specifically mentioned risks around inaccurate gestational estimates, called for a reinstatement of in-person appointments. The Government then decided to reinstate in-person appointments.

BPAS then joined prominent pro-abortion MPs to support an amendment to the Health and Care Bill that passed by a narrow margin of 27 votes to overturn the Government’s decision to reinstate these appointments.

Call to reinstate in-person appointments 

Right To Life UK spokesperson, Catherine Robinson, said “While the full details of this case are not available yet, the language used in reporting on the case indicates that the abortion would have been a late-term abortion on a baby at 28 weeks gestation, if not older”.

“The second charge was administering a poison with intent to procure a miscarriage, which indicates that the abortion was likely undertaken using abortion pills”.

“Medical abortions using abortion pills were made available from abortion providers such as BPAS and MSI Reproductive Choices without an in-person appointment during the pandemic”.

“This appears to be yet another case that would not have happened had the gestation of the baby been accurately identified by ultrasound or a physical examination during an in-person appointment. If this appointment had taken place, the gestation of the baby would have been accurately identified and an abortion could not have taken place”.

“We are again calling for the reinstatement of in-person appointments before abortions take place to ensure that the gestation of babies can accurately be assessed”. 

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Help stop three major anti-life threats.

Help stop three major anti-life threats.

Dear reader,

Thanks to the hard work and dedication of people like you across the UK, the McArthur assisted suicide Bill in Scotland was defeated in March by 69 votes to 57.

Then, in April, the Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill fell in the House of Lords.

Many commentators thought both Bills would become law.

If that had happened, governments in England, Scotland and Wales would now be preparing to roll out assisted suicide services.

Over the coming decades, this would have led to the deaths of many thousands of vulnerable people.

But that is not what happened.

Because supporters like you acted, those Bills were stopped.

Because of you, many vulnerable lives have been saved.

These were two very significant victories. But sadly, they are not the last battles we face this year.

The new Parliamentary session began on Wednesday. We now face three major threats.

  1. Attempts to bring back the Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill and bypass the House of Lords

    The assisted suicide lobby, led by Dignity in Dying, a multi-million-pound pressure group, has made it clear that it is going to attempt to bring back the Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill in the next parliamentary session.

    It then plans to use the Parliament Acts to bypass the House of Lords and force the Bill into law.

  2. Labour Government plans for a major expansion of abortion provision, including financial incentives for ‘lunch-hour’ abortions

    Under these plans, the Government would financially incentivise major abortion providers, BPAS and MSI Reproductive Choices, to provide ‘lunch-hour’ or ‘same-day’ abortions.

    ‘Lunch-hour’ abortion services are walk-in abortion services designed to fit into a woman’s lunch hour.

    Women facing an unplanned pregnancy need time, care and support, not a system that gives abortion clinics a financial incentive to rush them through consultations, scans and abortions on the same day.

    If these plans go ahead, many more lives are likely to be ended by abortion here in the UK.

  3. Extreme abortion up to birth proposals in Scotland

    In Scotland, plans are moving forward to introduce an extreme abortion up to birth law. This would go far beyond the abortion law change recently backed by the Lords for England and Wales.

    A review of abortion law in Scotland, commissioned by Humza Yousaf when he was Scottish First Minister, recommended that the Scottish Government scrap the current 24-week time limit – and abortion be available on social grounds, including for sex-selective purposes, right up to birth.

    The final plans are expected to be brought forward as a Government Bill in the new Scottish Parliament, which begins this Thursday.

If these three major threats succeed, thousands of vulnerable lives will be lost.

We cannot allow this to happen.

We can only defeat these three major threats with your help.

We ran our biggest campaigns ever to help defeat the assisted suicide Bills at Westminster and in Scotland.

That work has made a serious dent in our limited resources.

To cover this gap and ensure we can effectively defeat these three major threats in the coming months, we are aiming to raise at least £199,250 by midnight this Sunday (17 May 2026).

We are, therefore, appealing to you to please give as generously as you can.

Every donation, large or small, will make a crucial difference in saving the lives of the unborn and many others. Plus, if you are a UK taxpayer, £1 becomes £1.25 with Gift Aid at no extra cost to you.

By stopping these threats, YOU can save lives during this new Parliamentary session.

Will you donate now to help protect vulnerable lives from these three major threats?

EMERGENCY
APPEAL
to SAVE
lives

Help stop three major anti-life threats.

Help stop three major anti-life threats.