Some men have even tried to prevent women having abortions on grounds that the unborn foetus belongs to them. |
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In ancient Greece and Egypt, rue was employed to stimulate menstrual bleeding, induce abortions, and strengthen eyesight. |
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The number of women worldwide over all history consigned to Hades by Roger for having abortions must be in the hundreds of millions. |
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She would scrap it and have us return to the old days of backstreet abortions and unwanted pregnancies for young girls. |
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Women in Ireland don't have to resort to backstreet abortions because they can get on a plane and fly to England. |
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Induced abortions are those initiated voluntarily with the intention of terminating a pregnancy. |
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If abortions are a matter of fact, then it makes sense that termination should be made as safe as possible. |
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I think this directive may cause endangerment in the form of illegal abortions and abandoned children. |
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It meant safe abortions, rather than the unsafe ones women would attempt anyway. |
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Working from home, or in primitive premises, dukun often induce abortions using herb-based drinks followed by vigorous massage. |
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The baby's mother had caught rubella and when pregnant mums get rubella the results are abortions, miscarriages, stillbirths, and birth defects. |
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The other reality, though, is that the figures indicate that 6673 women with Irish addresses had abortions in Britain last year. |
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We must acknowledge and come to terms with the implicit cissexism in assuming that only women have abortions. |
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The herb is not described in the ballad, but it could well have been hemlock, since it has been used for herbal abortions. |
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Then, of course, there are the late abortions requested on the grounds of foetal abnormality and the prospect of severe handicap. |
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Some varieties of the pill cause more abortions and some less, but sooner or later all varieties are abortifacient. |
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Section 59 criminalizes the supply and procuring of abortifacients or instruments for use in unlawful abortions. |
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The motion asks that rates of teenage pregnancies, abortions and sexually transmitted infections are also revealed. |
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In 12 cases the pregnancies had already failed as a result of missed abortions or miscarriage and so would not have led to a live child. |
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Autumn is usually the problem time for abortions in spring-calving dairy herds. |
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Many of these attempts resulted in animals with deformities, genetic problems or late abortions. |
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Abortion in a previous pregnancy predisposes to further abortions or stillbirths in subsequent pregnancies. |
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My introduction to advertising came to consist of thinking up such abortions as banana creme topping. |
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In an interview, a doctor in Medellin, Colombia, said that while he offered safe, if secret, abortions, many abortionists did not. |
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These figures, however, do not include teenagers whose pregnancies ended in stillbirths or abortions. |
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Lazio, for example, is generally thought to be pro-choice, even though he has voted against late-term abortions. |
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The doctors were duly charged, but their acquittals established the legality of abortions in order to preserve mental health. |
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And this was before the emergence of gay marriage, partial-birth abortions, or stem cell research as subjects of controversy. |
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The recall of spontaneous abortions, stillbirths, illnesses, and deaths of family members may evoke strong emotional responses in patients. |
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And now, as his execution by lethal injection nears, some clinics providing abortions are on alert for possible violence. |
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The ultimate winner was an echt conservative who wants to rein in abortions and stiffen drug laws. |
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Dr Anthony offered no statistics whatsoever to justify the government's determination to legalize certain abortions. |
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She does not, for example, have problems with anti-abortion activists displaying the results of late abortions. |
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Doctors who perform abortions, meanwhile, bear the brunt of the organized anti-choice movement's wrath. |
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The clinic acknowledges that very few women who have abortions there do so because their lives are at risk. |
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In the days of ineffective or unavailable birth control and back alley abortions, that statement packed a lot of punch. |
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Both of them said that they'd never have an abortion, but they don't want to go back to the days of back alley abortions and women dying. |
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Other women will survive back alley abortions damaged forever, their fertility destroyed. |
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She performs abortions in secret, supports suffrage, and caters to consumptives and TB sufferers when few other boarding-house establishments will take them. |
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In her memoir, the Texas politico reveals she had two abortions for medical reasons. |
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Women had back alley abortions, a lot of them, and they died from them. |
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Now, the state has just two clinics providing surgical abortions, in Billings and Missoula. |
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Having to face a counselor's insinuations that they are ableist if they want to abort because of fetal disability just adds another burden on women seeking abortions. |
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As more women opt for medical terminations, using the abortion pill, rather than surgical abortions, nurses in gynaecology wards are more involved in the treatment. |
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Societies that do the least to support mothers and child-bearing have more abortions. |
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If abortion was illegal, many women would be forced to have abortions from unqualified physicians in backstreet clinics, risking their own health. |
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As a general rule, societies that do the most to support mothers and child-bearing have the fewest abortions. |
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Some of the desperate women who opted for backstreet abortions often had to have their uteruses surgically removed because of resulting massive infection. |
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It has become something of a given, not least among many who are pro-choice, that later abortions are mostly the result of a lack of access to early abortion. |
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With the overturning of existing criminal law restrictions, however, the basis for the presumption that abortions were done for health-related reasons has been eroded. |
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Their pregnancies led to 10 births, four abortions, and one miscarriage. |
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But there are also many reasons for having abortions that generate far more judgment and stigma. |
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The stipulation likely to be most widely felt is what experts are calling an effective shutdown of medication abortions. |
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Furthermore, welfare laws discourage states from providing assistance for abortions as well as to unwed mothers, placing low-income women in a double bind. |
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He argues that Western societies generally have regarded abortions occurring before the fetus showed signs of animation as not criminal in nature. |
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One factor Albert is disinclined to think is a reason for the decline in birth rate is an increase in abortions. |
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Women are consequently more likely to subject themselves to unsafe abortions or continue pregnancies against their will. |
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And late-term abortions after the 24th week of pregnancy are flatly illegal. |
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Moreover, as Jeffrey Goldberg points out, this has disturbing implications for late-term abortions. |
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Ford now claims he is and always has been pro-choice, but still supports a ban on late-term abortions. |
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In March of this year, a jury here took just 45 minutes to acquit Tiller of charges that he performed 19 illegal abortions. |
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Not only did Allen perform abortions, he was also the obstetrician who delivered Karen Santorum. |
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And sometimes, they chose to terminate their pregnancies by having abortions. |
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The fact is that 83 percent of elective abortions occur during the first trimester, and decline rapidly after that. |
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Physicians there are skilled enough to perform mid-trimester abortions, as well as procedures for women with fetal anomalies. |
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Do you favor giving the state legislature the constitutional authority to regulate abortions, or do you oppose this? |
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Dr. Julie Bindeman, a married mom of three, cried as she told the story of her two abortions. |
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Which politician wants to defend federally-subsidized abortions for convicted criminals? |
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The second defect was that the language of the act was unconstitutionally vague, and could make illegal much more commonly employed types of second trimester abortions. |
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All three are abortionists who specialize in late abortions. |
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These policies would therefore push away from eugenically oriented abortions. |
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Cuts to contraceptive services risk increasing unplanned pregnancies and abortions. |
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The number of abortions declined from 35,000 per year at the start of the 1930s to fewer than 2,000 per year at the end of the decade. |
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The Church opposes any legislation which would prevent women from obtaining abortions or information about abortions. |
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The World Health Organization recommends safe and legal abortions be available to all women. |
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As of 2008 Countries that permit abortions have different limits on how late in pregnancy abortion is allowed. |
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Historically, abortions have been done using herbal medicines, sharp tools, with force, or through other traditional methods. |
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Abortion laws and cultural or religious views of abortions are different around the world. |
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Reasons for procuring induced abortions are typically characterized as either therapeutic or elective. |
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Early medical abortions account for the majority of abortions before 9 weeks gestation in Britain, France, Switzerland, and the Nordic countries. |
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In the United States, the percentage of early medical abortions is far lower. |
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Legal abortions performed in the developed world are among the safest procedures in medicine. |
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Unsafe abortions are a major cause of injury and death among women worldwide. |
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A major factor in whether abortions are performed safely or not is the legal standing of abortion. |
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While maternal mortality seldom results from safe abortions, unsafe abortions result in 70,000 deaths and 5 million disabilities per year. |
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However, restrictive abortion laws are associated with increases in the percentage of abortions performed unsafely. |
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There are more second trimester abortions in developing countries such as China, India and Vietnam than in developed countries. |
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The reasons why women have abortions are diverse and vary across the world. |
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Many, but not all, of these allow legal abortions in a variety of circumstances. |
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Women without the means to travel can resort to providers of illegal abortions or attempt to perform an abortion by themselves. |
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Despite such restrictions, birth rates continued to lag, in part, because of unskilled induced abortions. |
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Tiller was a frequent target for antiabortion activism because of his willingness to perform late-term abortions. |
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During his time there, Davis counseled students seeking abortions. |
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That's why right-to-life groups consider the sheer quantity of American abortions a major weapon in their campaign. |
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The Legislature down in the Bayou State is following South Dakota's lead and working on an even stricter ban on all abortions. |
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She had had two abortions during the last two years and was receiving hydroxyprogesterone caproate treatment. |
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Plenty of non-conservatives are squeamish about 20-plus-week abortions. |
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Other requirements include giving the pregnant woman a list of agencies that offer free sonograms, but not abortions. |
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In some cases, it could also expose instances of abuse or statutory rape that teenage abortions may otherwise conceal. |
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This means no abortions, no distribution of contraceptives and no sterilizing operations such as vasectomies and tubal ligations. |
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He now says he is pro-choice, but supports a ban on late-term abortions. |
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Unlike surgical abortions, also known as vacuum aspiration, the abortion pill method is known as a medical abortion. |
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Vacuum aspiration abortions have never been shown to be safe in animal studies. |
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So why ignore the 68,000 women who die each year from unsafe abortions? |
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These horrific abortions were finally banned in 2003 when then-President Bush signed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act into law. |
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Wade decision, even to the point of accepting third-trimester abortions and partial-birth abortions. |
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Another study, by pro-abortionists no less, looked at 200 women who had abortions after 20 weeks for non-medical reasons. |
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The results of self-induced and backstreet abortions come to our hospitals for the damage to be put right. |
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Common disorders are Down syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, idiopathic mental subnormality, haemolytic anaemias, inborn errors of metabolism and recurrent spontaneous abortions. |
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On March 8, the NDP government of Saskatchewan announced that it would build a new secular hospital, with provisions for committing abortions and tubal ligations. |
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Of the approximately 65 abortions performed every year at Abington, many are to save the life of the woman or to terminate a chromosomally abnormal fetus. |
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In practice, almost all gynaecologists will perform abortions. |
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This entails use of high-quality methods such as manual vacuum aspiration techniques or drugs such as misoprostol to complete incomplete abortions and halt bleeding. |
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In 1935 a law was passed allowing abortions for eugenics reasons. |
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In the early 1970s he developed a soft, flexible cannula for manual vacuum aspiration that was widely used in the US and developing countries to perform early abortions. |
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Drey has acknowledged that her clinic performs about 600 abortions per year during the fifth and sixth months, as recounted by the National Right to Life organization. |
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Abortion advocates are accusing operators of crisis pregnancy centers of using bait-and-switch tactics in an effort to keep women from obtaining abortions. |
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Others, including antiabortion advocates, applauded Komen's decision to cut ties with Planned Parenthood, which provides services that include abortions. |
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In some cases, abortions have been performed on inviable fetuses very early on, but women whose pregnancies are more advanced are forced to carry to term. |
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Maternal toxicities include spontaneous abortions, premature labor and delivery, premature rupture of membranes, placenta previa, and abruptio placentae. |
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In fact, in 1999, our major abortuary in Kentucky stopped doing abortions. |
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Brucellosis, or Bang's disease as it's often called, reduces cattle fertility, causes abortions, and reduces milk production in beef and dairy cattle. |
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Some countries, such as Bangladesh, that nominally ban abortion, may also support clinics that perform abortions under the guise of menstrual hygiene. |
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An American study in 2002 concluded that about half of women having abortions were using a form of contraception at the time of becoming pregnant. |
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Some abortions are undergone as the result of societal pressures. |
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Unsafe abortions are believed to result in millions of injuries. |
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The World Health Organization defines unsafe abortions as those performed by unskilled individuals, with hazardous equipment, or in unsanitary facilities. |
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Medical abortions are those induced by abortifacient pharmaceuticals. |
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Advancing maternal age and a woman's history of previous spontaneous abortions are the two leading factors associated with a greater risk of spontaneous abortion. |
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On Tuesday, a federal appeals court is expected to consider an appeal of a federal court order compelling the release of medical records involving partial-birth abortions. |
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Understand what the ban on partial-birth abortions is about. |
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These benefits are achieved by reducing the number of unplanned pregnancies that subsequently result in unsafe abortions and by preventing pregnancies in those at high risk. |
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