The Preterm Foundation was a pioneering not-for-profit family planning clinic in Sydney Australia from 1974 to 2015, offering women a comprehensive range of counseling, contraception and first-trimester pregnancy termination services.
Preterm was the brainchild of Cronulla GP Ian Edwards, who in 1973 with his attorney brother Brian Edwards decided to set up a not-for-profit clinic to make affordable pregnancy termination freely available to women in the Sydney area. [1]
The foundation was reportedly financed by loans or gifts from its supporters. Bridget Gilling, its president and an advocate of abortion law reform, was sent to have lent $1,000 to launch the clinic. [2] Founding Board members included Australia Party founder and entrepreneur Gordon Barton, Forum magazine publisher Clyde Packer and barrister-businessman and renowned Anglo-Australian cricketer Geoffrey Keighley. [1]
Its medical advisory panel included Rodney Shearman, a professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at Sydney University, J.D. Llewellyn-Jones, associate professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, and Charles Kerr, professor of Social and Preventive Medicine at the university. [2]
Dr Dorothy Nolan, who was completing her obstetrics and gynaecology residency at Sutherland Hospital, agreed to become Preterm's clinical director. She said that while relieving pressure on Sydney's teaching hospitals by demand for abortions was a consideration, Preterm was primarily established to free women from the need to "shop around" for abortions and give them access to sympathetic counseling services. [1] [2]
About a week before Preterm opened, a suspected media leak fueled negative publicity highlighting a false claim that Preterm would offer "instant abortion on demand". Nolan later said she believed the press was "tipped off by a hostile doctor", angered that his fees were being undercut by Preterm's more affordable cost of around $50 for pregnancy termination. [3] [1] [2]
Preterm opened on June 14, 1974, in large, sunny premises above a warehouse on the Parramatta Road in the Sydney suburb of Camperdown. Staff were busier than expected during the first week of operations, terminating 50 first-trimester pregnancies at a cost of $50 per patient - just a third of the average $150 then being charged by private Sydney abortion doctors at the time. [4] [1]
Six months later, Preterm was performing 80-90 abortions per week at a cost of $70, up to 75 percent of which could be covered through a combination of federal government benefits and health funds. [5]
Preterm services included a mandatory consultation [6] with one of 16 women counselors before a decision to terminate a pregnancy could be taken. Counselors were trained to view an abortion request as indicative of a "life crisis", with the goal being to find the best solution to the problem. Not all women would choose to terminate a pregnancy and those who did not would be referred to other agencies for help in carrying their pregnancy to full-term. Counselors would also advise women who chose abortions on the use of contraception to avoid further unwanted pregnancies. [2]
Preterm dealt exclusively in first-trimester terminations via vacuum aspiration. Medical staff included eight doctors - five women and three men -- assisted by three registered nurses and two nursing assistants. Procedures lasted 3-5 minutes, with thorough inspection of the removed contents of the uterus to ensure that evacuation had been complete and no complications would arise. The woman was made to rest for an hour to evaluate blood pressure and assess for abdominal pain, before being released with a prescription for antibiotics and being given contraceptives or an intrauterine device. [2]
Within two weeks of opening, the Preterm clinic was the object of a demonstration by the Right to Life association, with an estimated 500 protesters gathering on the street outside the premises. [4]
In the early morning of April 7, 1975, a fire broke out on the ground floor of the three-story building housing the clinic and burned for 4-5 hours, gutting the entire building, destroying the clinic and all its equipment. A Preterm spokesperson said it would cost $20,000-$30,000 to replace destroyed equipment and prepare new premises. [7] [8] [9] [10]
Local news media said the police "arson squad" investigated, focusing on "a group opposing the right of women to have abortions" that had previously picketed the clinic. [7] [11] Various possible causes were cited in the months following the fire, including accidental or spontaneous combustion of refuse in the warehouse on the ground floor of the building. [1] [9]
Preterm director Dorothy Nolan later indicated "darker suspicions", telling the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper that "One of the doctors who had run a lucrative abortion business in Arncliffe until Preterm came on the scene had been making threatening calls to her home at all hours of the night and day." Nolan said she believed this doctor paid his gardener, who lived nearby, to set fire to the clinic because it had been undercutting his business. "There was a strong suspicion but we never had proof," Nolan said. [1]
Other than teaching hospitals, the only other abortion clinics at the time were opereated by Population Services International (Australasia) Ltd. [9] Under the direction of Sydney physician Geoffrey Davis, PSI operated two clinics, one on Foster Road in Arncliffe [12] and the other on Challis Avenue in Potts Point. [13]
Some time later, feminists working at the PSI clinics resigned and later said that the "burning down and destruction of Preterm’s premises and equipment on April 7, 1975, enabled Davis’ newly formed PSI to capture a large portion of the market." [9] The PSI workers, now working with Control Abortion Referral Service singled out Davis, producing a copy of a letter he wrote on 6th March 1975 to superiors at PSI headquarters in North Carolina, referencing "warming ourselves round the burning Reichstag" and proclaiming: "This week we crushed St. Annes [sic]; next week - Preterm." [14] They also noted Davis was said to have been “one of the first on the scene” on the morning of the Preterm fire. [9]
Police never established a definitive cause of the fire. [1]
After the fire, Preterm was unable to resume abortion services at its Camperdown premises and it took 18 months for the clinic to become operational again, [9] first at St Ann's private hospital in Killara [6] and later at a location in Surry Hills. [1]
In September 1977, Preterm sacked three workers and closed down its research and education department, including research team leader Emily Snyder, the clinic's founding counsellor co-ordinator. The sacking earned the ire of the Australian Social Welfare Union, which threatened to contact its member agencies and advise them not to refer women to Preterm unless the workers were reinstated. [15]
The research and education work carried out at Preterm had been seen previously as "critically important" in building arguments in favor of a woman's right to chose and as a buttress against attacks by Right to Life and other anti-abortion forces. But Preterm rationalized the sackings saying abortion was "no longer seen as a rallying point for women's rights movements." [15]
The sackings led Sydney's feminist movement to abandon its previous support of Preterm, with an article in the feminist paper Mabel calling for a boycott of the clinic and throwing support to the recently established Bessie Smyth Clinic in Homebush, the only remaining feminist-endorsed abortion clinic then operating in Sydney. [15]
A year after the sackings, Bettina Arndt, Preterm Board member and editor of Australian sex-education magazine Forum, further angered feminists with an article in the magazine endorsing Preterm, PSI and private practitioners as "probably the best places to go for an abortion" and criticizing the feminist abortion referral service Control for no longer referring women to either PSI or Preterm. [16]
In the 1980s, when religious faith groups turned their activism to anti-abortion protests, Preterm was seen as the arch-nemesis of the Sydney right-to-life movement and became the object of multiple demonstrations. Prayer vigils and sit-ins were organized to block access to the Preterm clinic, which in 1981 was vandalized with red paint and bricks thrown through its windows. [1]
Despite the opposition, Preterm persevered in its mission to provide safe reproductive healthcare and non-judgmental pregnancy terminations. By the 1990s it was estimated that the clinic carried out more than a quarter of all abortions in New South Wales and for many years it was the only clinic to offer termination services exclusively licensed by the New South Wales Department of Health and accredited under Australian federal safety standards. [1] [17]
In August 2015, Preterm closed down operations after 40 years, apparently the victim of high costs associated with maintaining its licensing and accreditation. Finding it difficult to compete against new players in the market, the board reportedly "opted to close rather than lower standards." A highly visible public campaign to save the clinic was unsuccessful. In September 2015, Preterm was sold to a private investor for an unknown sum. [17]
Abortion is the termination of a pregnancy by removal or expulsion of an embryo or fetus. An abortion that occurs without intervention is known as a miscarriage or "spontaneous abortion"; these occur in approximately 30% to 40% of all pregnancies. When deliberate steps are taken to end a pregnancy, it is called an induced abortion, or less frequently "induced miscarriage". The unmodified word abortion generally refers to an induced abortion. The most common reasons women give for having an abortion are for birth-timing and limiting family size. Other reasons reported include maternal health, an inability to afford a child, domestic violence, lack of support, feeling they are too young, wishing to complete education or advance a career, and not being able or willing to raise a child conceived as a result of rape or incest.
Abortion is a divisive issue in the United States. The issue of abortion is prevalent in American politics and culture wars, though a majority of Americans support continued access to abortion. There are widely different abortion laws depending on state.
Abortion in Australia is legal. There are no federal abortion laws, and full decriminalisation of the procedure has been enacted in all jurisdictions. Access to abortion varies between the states and territories: Surgical abortions are readily available on request within the first 22 to 24 weeks of pregnancy in most jurisdictions, and up to 16 weeks in Tasmania. Later-term abortions can be obtained with the approval of two doctors, although the Australian Capital Territory only requires a single physician's approval.
Dilation and evacuation (D&E) or dilatation and evacuation is the dilation of the cervix and surgical evacuation of the uterus after the first trimester of pregnancy. It is a method of abortion as well as a common procedure used after miscarriage to remove all pregnancy tissue.
A self-induced abortion is an abortion performed by the pregnant woman herself, or with the help of other, non-medical assistance. Although the term includes abortions induced outside of a clinical setting with legal, sometimes over-the-counter medication, it also refers to efforts to terminate a pregnancy through alternative, potentially more dangerous methods. Such practices may present a threat to the health of women.
Population Services International (PSI) is a 501(c)(3) registered nonprofit global health organization that began as an international not-for-profit provider of contraception and safe abortion services, and has evolved into developing and deploying programs today that target malaria, child survival, HIV, and reproductive health. PSI provides products, clinical services and behavior change communications for the health of people in high-need populations.
Governments sometimes take measures designed to afford legal protection of access to abortion. Such legislation often seeks to guard facilities which provide induced abortion against obstruction, vandalism, picketing, and other actions, or to protect patients and employees of such facilities from threats and harassment.
Abortion in South Africa is legal by request when the pregnancy is under 13 weeks. It is also legal to terminate a pregnancy between week 13 and week 20 under the following conditions: the continued pregnancy would significantly affect the pregnant person's social or economic circumstances, the continued pregnancy poses a risk of injury to the pregnant person's physical or mental health, there is a substantial risk that the foetus would suffer from a severe physical or mental abnormality, or the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest. If the pregnancy is more than 20 weeks, a termination is legal if the foetus' life is in danger, or there is a likelihood of serious birth defects.
The Elsie Refuge for women and children was a women's refuge set up in Glebe, Sydney in 1974. The project was the beginning of the NSW Women's Refuge Movement that responded to the needs of women and children escaping domestic violence by providing access to specialist accommodation and support services operating within a feminist framework.
Geoffrey Lancelot Rutter Davis (1933-2008) was an Australian medical doctor, who rose to prominence in Sydney in the 1970s as a leading provider of contraception and abortion services. He was also the owner for nearly 50 years of The Abbey, a 50-room mansion in the Sydney inner suburb of Annandale.
A medical abortion, also known as medication abortion or non-surgical abortion, occurs when drugs (medication) are used to bring about an abortion. Medical abortions are an alternative to surgical abortions such as vacuum aspiration or dilation and curettage. Medical abortions are more common than surgical abortions in most places around the world.
Abortion in Thailand is legal and available on-request up to 20 weeks of pregnancy. Abortion has been legal up to at least 12 weeks of pregnancy since 7 February 2021. Following a 2020 ruling of the Constitutional Court which declared a portion of the abortion statutes unconstitutional, the Parliament removed first-term abortion from the criminal code. Once strict, over time laws have been relaxed to take into account high rates of teen pregnancy, women who lack the means or will to raise children, and the consequences of illegal abortion.
Abortion in Queensland, Australia, is available on request in the first 22 weeks of pregnancy, with the approval of two doctors usually required for later terminations of pregnancy. Queensland law prohibits protesters from coming within 150 metres of an abortion clinic and requires conscientiously objecting doctors to refer women seeking an abortion to a doctor who will provide one. The current legal framework was introduced by the Palaszczuk Labor Government with the passage of the Termination of Pregnancy Act by the Parliament of Queensland on 17 October 2018 in a conscience vote. Before the Termination of Pregnancy Act took effect on 3 December 2018, abortion was subject to the Criminal Code and the common law McGuire ruling, which made abortion unlawful unless the abortion provider had a reasonable belief that a woman's physical or mental health was at risk. Availability varies across the state, and is more limited in rural and remote areas outside South East Queensland. In the absence of standardised data collection, it is estimated that between 10,000 and 14,000 abortions occur every year in Queensland.
Abortion in Florida is generally illegal after six weeks from the woman's last menstrual period, when many women do not yet know they are pregnant. This law came into effect in May 2024, being approved by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis following its passage in the Florida House of Representatives and the Florida Senate, with only Republican state legislators supporting and only Democratic state legislators opposing. Additionally, pregnant women are generally required to make two visits to a medical facility 24 hours apart to be able to obtain an abortion, in a law approved by Republican Governor Rick Scott in 2015.
The NSW Women's Refuge Movement began in 1974 with the establishment of Elsie Refuge in Glebe, NSW. Other refuges were established throughout the 1970s, operating within a feminist framework and responding to the needs of women and children escaping domestic violence. At first, the refuges were developed through volunteer effort and without government funding. Gradually the government took over funding of the refuges, with the states funding the buildings and the federal government funding the running costs. The NSW Women's Refuge Movement continued to provide services to women with diverse needs and to raise awareness about domestic violence.
Population Services International (Australasia) was an Australian based subsidiary of Population Services International. PSI Australasia operated as a not-for-profit corporation, continuously registered in Australia from mid-1973 to 1992, with the mission of providing contraception and abortion services.
Australia's Royal Commission on Human Relationships was established in August 1974 by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) after the failure in 1973 of the government to pass reforms to the country's abortion legislation.
Lynette "Lyn" Syme (1948-2019) was an Australian political and labor activist, feminist and aboriginal land-rights advocate, recognized in her later years as a Wiradjuri elder of the Dabee people in what is current-day New South Wales.
Control Abortion Referral Service was a feminist Australian organisation active from 1973 through the mid-1980s that advised and supported women seeking abortion from New South Wales, other Australian states and from abroad, particularly from New Zealand. It also developed new women-run abortion services.
Women's Liberation House, also known simply as Women's House, was the headquarters for the Women's Liberation Movement and epicentre for organizing around issues impacting women in Sydney and across Australia from the late-1960s through the 1990s.
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)