
Nurses and midwifes allowed to prescribe abortions in NSW bringing state in line with rest of Australia
Abortion acess in NSW will expand as the state allows nurses and midwives to prescribe drugs to terminate pregnancies.
An amended bill to address the address the state's 'abortion deserts' was passed in NSW parliament's lower house on Wednesday.
It was put forward by Greens MP Amanda Cohn to remove barriers to abortion for women in areas outside major cities.
Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today
The bill will still need to return to the state's upper house, which does not sit again until May 27.
Sixty-five lower house MPs supported the change in a conscience vote, while 20 were opposed.
Political leaders lamented the 'Americanisation' of the debate around increasing access.
NSW Opposition Leader Mark Speakman alleged in parliament that a prominent campaigner threatened to derail his leadership if he supported the bill.
Anti-abortion activist Joanna Howe told him she would 'lead a public campaign aimed at encouraging a grassroots opposition to you as Liberal leader,' Speakman told MPs under parliamentary privilege.
'I will not cave to brazen bullying like this, nor to the Americanisation of NSW politics,' he said.
Speakman supported the bill, calling it 'a shadow of its former self'.
The pared-back bill has been narrowed along guidelines from the national regulator, allowing qualified nurse practitioner and endorsed midwives to prescribe abortion medication known as MS-2 Step.
'It can no longer be characterised as a 'radical Greens bill',' Speakman said.
Premier Chris Minns backed his political rival, suggesting Dr Howe had spread an 'enormous amount of misinformation and lies' on her social media channels.
'It's whipped up a lot of good people in the community believing that the legislative changes are far more extensive than they in fact were,' Minns said.
AAP FactCheck in March debunked the Adelaide Law School professor's claim the bill would 'force the closure of all Christian and Catholic hospitals unless they perform abortions'.
The push to expand abortion access came after revelations a woman was denied an abortion on the day of her planned procedure at Queanbeyan District Hospital, in the southeast of NSW, in August 2024.
Another public hospital in Orange, in the Central Tablelands, restricted terminations for non-medical reasons, triggering Health Minister Ryan Park to intervene and reinstate abortions without restrictions in October 2024.
Abortion was permitted by the courts in NSW in 1971 and decriminalised in 2019 but is not always accessible, particularly in rural and regional areas.
Rules for abortion acrosss Australia
The ACT, Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia have also permitted qualified nurses and midwives to prescribe abortion drugs following advice from the Therapeutic Goods Administration.
But when it comes to abortion, there are no federal laws and the approach varies across Australia, according to state and territory governments and national abortion provider and advocate MSI Australia.
In the ACT, gestational limits include nine weeks for medical abortions and 16 weeks for surgical abortions, but services are accessible after that time with referrals from a doctor
Nurses and midwives in the ACT are also permitted to prescribe drugs for medical terminations
In the Northern Territory and Victoria, abortion is legal up to 24 weeks gestation, and permitted after that in special or emergency circumstances with approval from two doctors
In Queensland, abortion is legal up to 22 weeks, and permitted after that in special or emergency circumstances with approval from two doctors.
Nurses and midwives in Queensland are also permitted to prescribe and administer drugs for medical terminations
In NSW, abortion is legal up to 22 weeks, and permitted after that in special or emergency circumstances with approval from two doctors.
Nurses and midwives will be able to prescribe drugs for medical terminations up to nine weeks gestation under legislation before parliament.
In Tasmania, abortion is legal up to 16 weeks, and permitted after that in special or emergency circumstances with approval from two doctors.
In South Australia, abortion is legal up to 22 weeks and six days, and permitted after that in special or emergency circumstances with approval from two doctors.
Nurses and midwives are also permitted to prescribe drugs for medical terminations.
In Western Australia, abortion is legal up to 23 weeks, and permitted after that in special or emergency circumstances with approval from two doctors.
Nurses and midwives in Western Australia are also permitted to prescribe drugs for medical terminations.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
The Project has gone. Does its ‘serious news' replacement deliver?
Ten officially entered its News+ era on Monday night – and when you add that symbol to the name of your news service, it invites the critical question: News plus … what? From 6pm, we got the answer. We'd been promised evening news with a difference, and this was certainly that. In some ways, you might call it Ten News Minus: minus sport, minus weather, minus the traditional 6pm news fare of car crashes and suburban crime waves. In the opening, co-anchor Denham Hitchcock declared: 'We're not here to tell you what to think. We're not here to scare or depress you.' And in the fright-fest wasteland that commercial TV news often becomes in the early evening, this sounds like a welcome change for those viewers tired of the fear-mongering. So that's the subtraction; what's the plus? Quite a lot, in that 10 News + resembles neither its commercial news rivals on Nine and Seven, nor its predecessor The Project. There is not a comedian in sight. Instead, it's a tightly curated mix of news and current affairs that featured only seven stories on debut – the first, a lengthy investigation helmed by Hitchcock into the case of Debbie Voulgaris, convicted in Taiwan of drug smuggling. It was about 6.30pm before we moved to the second story, a wrap of July 1 cost-of-living measures, which segued into a by-the-numbers chat with Anthony Albanese, who was beamed in, beaming, from Canberra to give the new show his blessing. We learnt the PM would not call Donald Trump 'daddy'; that the NATO leader who did so is 'a bit of a character'; and that Albo would not be discussing his intelligence briefings on Iran – 'even on the first edition of your new show'. It was 6.43pm before we got to the ' mushroom murders ' jury deliberations from a reporter in Morwell, followed by a quick look at a former Greens candidate's claims of police brutality at a pro-Palestine protest. Then came the only story that resembled standard TV news fare – a teen surfer attacked by a shark at the weekend. The show wrapped with an interview with astronaut Chris Hadfield, in Australia on a speaking tour.

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
The Project has gone. Does its ‘serious news' replacement deliver?
Ten officially entered its News+ era on Monday night – and when you add that symbol to the name of your news service, it invites the critical question: News plus … what? From 6pm, we got the answer. We'd been promised evening news with a difference, and this was certainly that. In some ways, you might call it Ten News Minus: minus sport, minus weather, minus the traditional 6pm news fare of car crashes and suburban crime waves. In the opening, co-anchor Denham Hitchcock declared: 'We're not here to tell you what to think. We're not here to scare or depress you.' And in the fright-fest wasteland that commercial TV news often becomes in the early evening, this sounds like a welcome change for those viewers tired of the fear-mongering. So that's the subtraction; what's the plus? Quite a lot, in that 10 News + resembles neither its commercial news rivals on Nine and Seven, nor its predecessor The Project. There is not a comedian in sight. Instead, it's a tightly curated mix of news and current affairs that featured only seven stories on debut – the first, a lengthy investigation helmed by Hitchcock into the case of Debbie Voulgaris, convicted in Taiwan of drug smuggling. It was about 6.30pm before we moved to the second story, a wrap of July 1 cost-of-living measures, which segued into a by-the-numbers chat with Anthony Albanese, who was beamed in, beaming, from Canberra to give the new show his blessing. We learnt the PM would not call Donald Trump 'daddy'; that the NATO leader who did so is 'a bit of a character'; and that Albo would not be discussing his intelligence briefings on Iran – 'even on the first edition of your new show'. It was 6.43pm before we got to the ' mushroom murders ' jury deliberations from a reporter in Morwell, followed by a quick look at a former Greens candidate's claims of police brutality at a pro-Palestine protest. Then came the only story that resembled standard TV news fare – a teen surfer attacked by a shark at the weekend. The show wrapped with an interview with astronaut Chris Hadfield, in Australia on a speaking tour.


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Critical incident declared after former Greens candidate Hannah Thomas injured at Sydney protest
A state police watchdog will oversee a probe into a violent arrest at a pro-Palestine rally that left allegedly seriously injured a one-time federal Greens candidate. The decision on Monday ends days of NSW Police refusals to declare the wounding of Hannah Thomas a critical incident, requiring a full investigation with independent oversight. WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Probe called into violent arrest at pro-Palestine rally. The 35-year-old was among five people arrested in Sydney on Friday outside an Australian firm reportedly linked to the manufacture of components for Israeli Defence Force fighter jets. Police have faced scrutiny over the arrest after Thomas said the action could result in permanent vision loss in her right eye. On Monday afternoon, NSW Police said a critical incident investigation had been declared after a review of her medical records, which showed her injury was serious enough to warrant the decision. 'NSW Police had sought medical information from the 35-year-old woman, on multiple occasions, since the incident to determine if her injuries had met the critical incident threshold,' a statement said. A team of officers from another command would investigate the incident, with internal review by professional standards and external oversight from police watchdog the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. Earlier, NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Brett McFadden said he had not seen any misconduct on body-worn camera footage of the incident and all officers involved remained on duty. But lawyer Peter O'Brien, representing Thomas, said he had grave concerns over the force's actions and suggested police felt emboldened to shut down protests after a recent crackdown. 'The recordings demonstrate that there was a fundamental misunderstanding as to the extent of the police officer's powers to give directions leading up to the arrests which ensued,' he said. 'Hannah Thomas has sustained a serious and potentially life-altering injury as a result of her interaction with police at the protest.' Posting on social media from her hospital bed, Thomas said 'Draconian' anti-protest laws had given police a licence 'to crack down on peaceful protest in extremely violent, brutal ways'. 'I'm five-foot-one, I weigh about 45kg, I was engaged in peaceful protest,' she said. Premier Chris Minns refused to criticise police conduct until further information came to light, underlining a balance of enforcing the law and allowing freedom of political expression. The protesters accused a southwest Sydney business of making parts for Israel fighter jets, a claim the firm denies. Minns denied controversial protest laws passed in February were used by police to move on the demonstrators on Friday morning, as claimed by Greens MPs, or that the laws had emboldened police to act more forcefully. Police said the protest was unauthorised and blocked access to the Belmore business. 'A scuffle ensued between police and protesters' during attempts to arrest the protesters for not complying with move-on directions, they said. A video of the incident showed police dragging one of the protesters as onlookers repeatedly shouted 'get off her' and 'let go of her'. Thomas, who ran second to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the inner-west Sydney seat of Grayndler in the federal election in May, was charged with hindering or resisting police and not following a move-on direction. She is set to appear at Bankstown Local Court in August. Footage of Ms Thomas circulating online showed her eye swollen shut and with blood on her face before she was taken to hospital. All five protesters arrested during the scuffle were granted bail and four will appear in Bankstown Local Court on July 15.