Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy

Women’s right to abortion has been questioned over the past few decades, in tandem with the increasing number of doctors who refuse to perform the procedure in Italian public hospitals. In this paper I argue that even when there is no conscience-based refusal by health professionals, other factors c...

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Main Author: Chiara Quagliariello
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ledizioni 2018-11-01
Series:Antropologia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/1459
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author Chiara Quagliariello
author_facet Chiara Quagliariello
author_sort Chiara Quagliariello
collection DOAJ
description Women’s right to abortion has been questioned over the past few decades, in tandem with the increasing number of doctors who refuse to perform the procedure in Italian public hospitals. In this paper I argue that even when there is no conscience-based refusal by health professionals, other factors can hinder women’s access to legal abortion. My study focuses on three aspects of the medical assistance offered to women who desire or who need to end their pregnancy: (i) the obligation for doctors to provide information and ask for informed consent from patients before the abortion procedure can take place; (ii) the growing presence of men, such as women’s partners, during medical consultations related to abortion; and (iii) the growing influence of psychological consultations before and after abortion. Starting from the findings of long-term ethnographic work in Italy, I examine to what extent these elements play a role in therapeutic and non-therapeutic abortion, and according to women’s social profile.
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spelling doaj-art-8c258b3e92514df7b2ff300162bbea5a2025-08-20T03:51:13ZengLedizioniAntropologia2281-40432420-84692018-11-0152 N.S.10.14672/ada2018145995-1111124Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in ItalyChiara QuagliarielloWomen’s right to abortion has been questioned over the past few decades, in tandem with the increasing number of doctors who refuse to perform the procedure in Italian public hospitals. In this paper I argue that even when there is no conscience-based refusal by health professionals, other factors can hinder women’s access to legal abortion. My study focuses on three aspects of the medical assistance offered to women who desire or who need to end their pregnancy: (i) the obligation for doctors to provide information and ask for informed consent from patients before the abortion procedure can take place; (ii) the growing presence of men, such as women’s partners, during medical consultations related to abortion; and (iii) the growing influence of psychological consultations before and after abortion. Starting from the findings of long-term ethnographic work in Italy, I examine to what extent these elements play a role in therapeutic and non-therapeutic abortion, and according to women’s social profile.https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/1459Informed consentGender rolesPost-traumatic stressItaly
spellingShingle Chiara Quagliariello
Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy
Antropologia
Informed consent
Gender roles
Post-traumatic stress
Italy
title Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy
title_full Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy
title_fullStr Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy
title_short Beyond Medical Bureaucracy: an Inquiry into Women’s Right to Abortion in Italy
title_sort beyond medical bureaucracy an inquiry into women s right to abortion in italy
topic Informed consent
Gender roles
Post-traumatic stress
Italy
url https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/1459
work_keys_str_mv AT chiaraquagliariello beyondmedicalbureaucracyaninquiryintowomensrighttoabortioninitaly