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In-person later abortion accompaniment: a feminist collective-facilitated self-care practice in Latin America

Chiara Bercu, Heidi Moseson, Julia McReynolds-Pérez, Emily Wilkinson Salamea, Belén Grosso, María Trpin, Ruth Zurbriggen, Carolina Cisternas, Milena Meza, Viviana Alejandra Díaz, Katrina Kimport

2021Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In Argentina, Chile and Ecuador, abortion at later durations of pregnancy is legally restricted. Feminist collectives in these contexts support people through self-managed medical abortion outside the healthcare system. The model of in-person abortion accompaniment represents an opportunity to examine a self-care practice that challenges and reimagines abortion provision. We formed a collaborative partnership built on a commitment to shared power and decision-making between researchers and partners. We conducted 28 key informant interviews with accompaniers in Argentina, Chile and Ecuador in 2019 about their model of in-person abortion accompaniment at later durations of pregnancy. We iteratively coded transcripts using a thematic analysis approach. Accompaniers premised their work in a feminist activist framework that understands accompaniment as addressing inequalities and expanding rights, especially for the historically marginalised. Through a detailed description of the process of in-person accompaniment, we show that the model, including the logistical considerations and security mechanisms put in place to ensure favourable abortion outcomes, emphasises peer-to-peer provision of supportive physical and emotional care of the accompanied person. In this way, it represents supported self-care through which individuals are centred as the protagonists of their own abortion, while being accompanied by feminist peers. This model of supported self-care challenges the idea that "self-care" necessarily means "solo care", or care that happens alone. The model's focus on peer-to-peer transfer of knowledge, providing emotional support, and centring the accompanied person not only expands access to abortion, but represents person-centred practices that could be scaled and replicated across contexts.

Topics & Concepts

AbortionGeneral partnershipThematic analysisPeer supportPsychologySociologyNursingPublic relationsGender studiesMedicinePolitical sciencePregnancyLawQualitative researchSocial scienceBiologyGeneticsReproductive Health and ContraceptionReproductive Health and TechnologiesMaternal and Perinatal Health Interventions
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