logo
NSW Parliament Passes Bill to Allow Nurses, Midwives to Prescribe Abortion Drugs

NSW Parliament Passes Bill to Allow Nurses, Midwives to Prescribe Abortion Drugs

Epoch Times26-05-2025

After extensive debate and review, the Abortion Law Reform Amendment (Health Care Access) Bill 2025 passed the NSW Parliament on May 14, with 65 votes in favour and 20 against.
The bill marks a significant step in expanding access to abortion services in regional and rural NSW.
Introduced by Greens MP Dr Amanda Cohn, the bill allows nurse practitioners and endorsed midwives to prescribe and provide medical abortion drugs for pregnancies up to nine weeks—a role previously limited to doctors.
Cohn, who led the reform, said the bill would help address gaps in reproductive care for women outside metropolitan areas.
'This bill is about access,' she said. 'It's about ensuring women outside our cities can get safe, legal, timely reproductive healthcare.'
Currently, only doctors can prescribe MS-2 Step—the medication used for medical abortions—making access in regional areas difficult. Cohn argued the bill was necessary to 'end abortion deserts' in rural NSW.
Related Stories
5/14/2025
5/13/2025
The legislation also gives the health minister authority to direct public hospitals to provide abortion services.
However, a clause that would have required 'conscientious objectors' to refer patients elsewhere was removed during negotiations.
This clause was heavily criticised by former Prime Minister Tony Abbott who said it would be 'cancelling faith in public life,' and force those with religious beliefs to act
Abbott spoke at a protest outside NSW Parliament House on May 7 attended by hundreds of individuals.
Final Debate Sees Push For Stricter Conditions
Despite the bill's broad support from parliamentarians, its final debate saw several MPs attempt to introduce stricter conditions.
Some MPs proposed that only nurse practitioners and midwives with further years of experience should be permitted to prescribe abortion medication. Others argued for mandatory counselling alongside any termination procedure.
Alister Henskens, the member for Wahroonga, and Joe McGirr, member for Wagga Wagga, were among those calling for these changes.
However, Independent MP Alex Greenwich opposed the stricter conditions, saying they had not been consulted with the nursing profession, and risked undermining the bill's intent.
'It essentially seeks to add two years' experience, in addition to the extensive training nurse practitioners and endorsed midwives have already undertaken,' Greenwich said.
He noted that nurses in Australia must already complete 5,000 hours of practice in their specialty before they can apply to become a nurse practitioner.
Once endorsed, they are required to undertake additional professional development, and be governed by legal and clinical standards.
Health Minister Opposes Training Requirement
Health Minister Ryan Park also opposed the proposed training requirement, saying it would create barriers to access.
'Stipulating specific training requirements is not appropriate to do via legislation,' he said.
He added that no other health service sets clinical training standards in legislation, and warned that such a move could set an unworkable precedent, putting NSW out of line with national practices.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposals
Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposals

Yahoo

time18 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposals

As the 'big, beautiful bill' teeters towards passage in the Senate, every major health system in Louisiana sent a letter Saturday to the state's entire congressional delegation, including Speaker Mike Johnson (R), warning that planned cuts to Medicaid would be 'historic in their devastation.' The letter said that the Senate's version of the bill would cut more than $4 billion in Medicaid funding, with a loss of more than 16,000 jobs. Even the House's version of cuts, the letter stated, would be a more palatable solution. However, the 'economic consequences pale in comparison to the harm that will be caused to residents across the state, regardless of insurance status, who will no longer be able to get the care that they need,' the letter reads. 'Steep cuts will force consolidation of services, staffing reductions and closures, reducing healthcare access to everyone in our communities. Our rural communities will especially feel the impact as many of these hospitals are already in difficult financial situations and are likely to experience a significant reduction of services.' The letter was also sent to Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), who expressed concerns about the cuts to Medicaid in the Senate version of the bill Thursday and said that the House version would be preferable. However, Cassidy has not since spoken out against the bill, a vote for which kicked off in the Senate Saturday night. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Budapest Pride defies ban as huge crowds march in protest against Hungary's anti-LGBTQ laws
Budapest Pride defies ban as huge crowds march in protest against Hungary's anti-LGBTQ laws

CNN

timea day ago

  • CNN

Budapest Pride defies ban as huge crowds march in protest against Hungary's anti-LGBTQ laws

Beneath a blaze of rainbow flags and amid roars of defiance, big crowds gathered in the Hungarian capital Budapest for the city's 30th annual Pride march – an event that, this year, is unfolding as both a celebration and a protest. Moving through the capital in the sweltering heat, demonstrators carried signs reading 'Solidarity with Budapest Pride' and waved placards bearing crossed-out illustrations of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Music played from portable speakers as people of all ages joined the march – families with pushchairs, teenagers draped in capes, and older residents walking alongside activists. From the city's historic centre to its riverside roads, the procession swelled in numbers and noise – visibly reclaiming public space in defiance of a law designed to push them out. The march proceeded in open defiance of a police ban imposed earlier this year under sweeping new legislation that prohibits LGBTQ+ events nationwide. At least 70 members of the European Parliament were expected to join the procession, officials told CNN in May. Van Sparrentak, who is a Dutch MEP from the parliament's 'Greens/European Free Alliance' political group, told CNN that she will be attending Budapest Pride to 'support the LGBTIQ+ community in Hungary, to let them know that they are not alone (and) to be visible as a community.' 'Pride is a protest, and if Orbán can ban Budapest Pride without consequences, every pride is one election away from being banned,' she continued. In March, Hungarian lawmakers passed legislation barring Pride events and permitting the use of facial recognition technology to identify participants – measures campaigners say is illegal and part of a wider crackdown on the LGBTQ+ community. Orban welcomed the ban, which he said would outlaw gatherings that 'violate child protection laws.' His government has pushed a strongly Christian and conservative agenda. The ban sparked lively protests in Budapest in March, with organizers of the city's Pride vowing to continue with the annual festival despite the new law and declaring: 'We will fight this new fascist ban.' A petition demanding police reject the ban has gathered over 120,000 signatures from supporters in 73 countries, urging authorities to 'reject this unjust law' – believed to be the first of its kind in the EU's recent history – and ensure that the march proceeded 'unhindered and peacefully, free from discrimination, harassment, fear or violence.' CNN's Catherine Nicholls and Billy Stockwell contributed to this report.

Budapest Pride defies ban as huge crowds march in protest against Hungary's anti-LGBTQ laws
Budapest Pride defies ban as huge crowds march in protest against Hungary's anti-LGBTQ laws

CNN

timea day ago

  • CNN

Budapest Pride defies ban as huge crowds march in protest against Hungary's anti-LGBTQ laws

Beneath a blaze of rainbow flags and amid roars of defiance, big crowds gathered in the Hungarian capital Budapest for the city's 30th annual Pride march – an event that, this year, is unfolding as both a celebration and a protest. Moving through the capital in the sweltering heat, demonstrators carried signs reading 'Solidarity with Budapest Pride' and waved placards bearing crossed-out illustrations of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Music played from portable speakers as people of all ages joined the march – families with pushchairs, teenagers draped in capes, and older residents walking alongside activists. From the city's historic centre to its riverside roads, the procession swelled in numbers and noise – visibly reclaiming public space in defiance of a law designed to push them out. The march proceeded in open defiance of a police ban imposed earlier this year under sweeping new legislation that prohibits LGBTQ+ events nationwide. At least 70 members of the European Parliament were expected to join the procession, officials told CNN in May. Van Sparrentak, who is a Dutch MEP from the parliament's 'Greens/European Free Alliance' political group, told CNN that she will be attending Budapest Pride to 'support the LGBTIQ+ community in Hungary, to let them know that they are not alone (and) to be visible as a community.' 'Pride is a protest, and if Orbán can ban Budapest Pride without consequences, every pride is one election away from being banned,' she continued. In March, Hungarian lawmakers passed legislation barring Pride events and permitting the use of facial recognition technology to identify participants – measures campaigners say is illegal and part of a wider crackdown on the LGBTQ+ community. Orban welcomed the ban, which he said would outlaw gatherings that 'violate child protection laws.' His government has pushed a strongly Christian and conservative agenda. The ban sparked lively protests in Budapest in March, with organizers of the city's Pride vowing to continue with the annual festival despite the new law and declaring: 'We will fight this new fascist ban.' A petition demanding police reject the ban has gathered over 120,000 signatures from supporters in 73 countries, urging authorities to 'reject this unjust law' – believed to be the first of its kind in the EU's recent history – and ensure that the march proceeded 'unhindered and peacefully, free from discrimination, harassment, fear or violence.' CNN's Catherine Nicholls and Billy Stockwell contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store