Abortion in conflict zones: moral responsibilities of humanitarian agencies in providing safe abortion care

冲突地区的堕胎:人道主义机构在提供安全堕胎服务方面的道德责任

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Abstract

Unsafe abortion remains a leading cause of maternal mortality globally, disproportionately affecting women in conflict zones where health systems are fractured, legal protections are weakened, and access to reproductive care is severely limited. Armed conflict increases the incidence of unwanted pregnancy through sexual violence, displacement, and disruption of contraceptive services, while also heightening barriers to timely, comprehensive abortion care. Despite growing international recognition of abortion as a life-saving intervention, humanitarian agencies often face legal, cultural, and operational barriers that hinder service provision. From an ethical standpoint, obligations grounded in humanity, beneficence, respect for autonomy, impartiality, and the right to health support the inclusion of safe abortion as an essential, reproductive health service. International practice shows that agencies can deliver services through adaptable modalities such as mobile clinics, trained local providers, telemedicine guidance, and integration of the minimum initial service package at onset of crises; but legal variability and criminalization complicate implementation and expose both patients and providers to risk. Operational challenges include disrupted supply chains for medical abortion drugs and equipment, workforce shortages and ethical tensions among staff, monitoring and accountability constraints, and community resistance shaped by cultural and religious norms. The analysis highlights pragmatic strategies that preserve rights while navigating constraints: prioritizing clinical training and values-based preparation for personnel, ensuring availability of evidence-based supplies, embedding timely abortion care within emergency service packages, engaging communities to reduce stigma, and strengthening monitoring systems to protect patients and providers. Safe abortion services in humanitarian settings are not optional adjuncts but moral imperatives. Humanitarian agencies must move beyond rhetorical support to operationalize rights-centred, evidence-based abortion care despite legal and logistical challenges. Upholding reproductive dignity and preventing avoidable harm in conflict zones requires decisive action: sustained commitment to service delivery, workforce capacity, supply security, community engagement, and accountability mechanisms that together translate ethical obligation into lifesaving practice.

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