While 18 U.S. states have essentially banned abortion for pregnant people facing a mental health crisis, Ireland, which had one of the strictest abortion laws in the European Union until 2018, has taken a different approach.
Ireland has protected the right to seek an abortion because of the risk of suicide since 1992. While more than two-thirds of U.S. states have enacted laws that include mental health among the medical reasons a woman can have an abortion, Ireland protected exceptions for risk of suicide long before the country voted in 2018 to repeal its amendment banning abortion.
In 1992, the Irish Supreme Court established the right to get an abortion for emergencies including risk of suicide after a teen rape victim’s family sought to travel abroad to get their daughter an abortion.
In 1997, a separate case in Ireland’s high court found a teen had the right to travel to seek an abortion because of risk of suicide, though her parents opposed the abortion.
Hayden Tomlin, a native of Ireland who became a U.S. citizen in 2019, called these cases a catalyst for legalizing abortion through 12 weeks in Ireland in 2018 while addressing the South Carolina House Judiciary Committee in May.
“In that time, countless women met similar fates or had to travel to another country to seek medical care because their own country did not care to help them,” said Tomlin. “Many suffered great trauma mentally and medically, whether due to the circumstances of their conception, the lonely travel abroad or mainly the inaccessibility of health care equal to their peers.”
Irish voters rejected two separate referendums in 1992 and 2002 that sought to rescind the exception for suicidal ideation. In 2013, the Oireachtas, Ireland’s parliament, codified the protection for risk of suicide into Irish law until it was superseded by the more expansive referendum.
Catherine Conlon, associate professor and director of the sociology and…
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