Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Felicity Gerry is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Felicity Gerry.


Contraception | 2016

Mifepristone by prescription: not quite a reality in the Northern Territory of Australia

Suzanne Belton; Ea Caitlen Mulligan; Felicity Gerry; Paul Hyland; Virginia Skinner

Drs. Grossman and Goldstones [1] commentary in Contraception discussed the prescribing requirements of mifepristone and lamented its slow uptake, comparing the United States (USA) with Australia. It suggested that Australia was ahead of the USA. We support and provide abortion services and legal research in Australia and use our local knowledge to correct this commentary. Sadly the hope that Australia is leading the USA in womens health care is false. The maps in Grossman and Goldstones commentary imply full coverage in the Northern Territory with reference to ‘certified prescribers’ and ‘pharmacist dispensers’. This may be accurate in terms of numbers of professional certification at the time the maps were produced but it is not accurate in terms of access to mifepristone for early medical abortion. This is for two reasons: firstly, finding professionally qualified health care professionals to work in the Territory is difficult and those who do often stay for short periods of time. Commonly there are fewer than four doctors providing a surgical service. Secondly, current legislation is prohibitive so that mifepristone is not prescribed at all for first trimester abortion [2]. The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists guidelines on mifepristone use for medical abortion recently removed the requirement that mifepristone be administered in the presence of the doctor. However, section 208B of the Northern Territory Criminal Code provides a criminal offence of ‘procuring abortion’. A person is guilty of an offence if the person administers a drug to a woman or causes a drug to be taken by a woman. Explanatory notes in section 11 of the Medical Services Act (MSA) [3] state, it is lawful for a medical practitioner to give medical treatment with the intention of terminating a womans pregnancy. However, ‘medical treatment’ is defined to include all forms of surgery. The MSA also specifically provides that the treatment is given in a hospital and other restrictive provisions relating to consent and the opinions for treatment be formed by a gynecologist/obstetrician, thus limiting service provision. In practice surgical termination of pregnancy only occurs in three hospitals located in Darwin and Alice Springs that are 1500 km apart. There is no provision of early medical abortion for suburban, rural or remote communities, whatever their local health provider may have by way of certification. On insurance advice doctors do not prescribe mifepristone for early medical abortion in general practices, remote area clinics or clinical settings such as outpatient or day surgery models. Women need to travel long distances to reach surgical abortion services. Similarly in the state of South Australia, criminal law provisions restrict abortion treatment to prescribed hospitals, only five of which have established medication abortion services. It follows that the Grossman and Goldstone suggestion that large parts of Australia have doctor prescribers and pharmacists widely available who supply mifepristone is misleading. The laws are impediments to best practice. Despite our correction, we join with Drs. Grossman and Goldstone in the disappointment that womens reproductive health rights are so poorly observed.


Computer Law & Security Review | 2015

Access to extraterritorial evidence: The Microsoft cloud case and beyond

Dan Jerker B. Svantesson; Felicity Gerry


Archive | 2015

Reproductive Health and Rights in the Northern Territory: Reforming the Medical Services Act 1974

Felicity Gerry; Suzanne Belton; Jeswynn Yogaratnam


Archive | 2018

Timor-Leste and the Empowerment of Women: Access toJustice and the Future for Domestic, Family and SexualViolence Survivors(Part 3): Key Issues

Felicity Gerry; Catarina Sjölin


Archive | 2016

Women in prison: is the justice system fit for purpose?

Felicity Gerry; Lyndon Harris


Archive | 2016

Using Digital Technologies to Combat Human Trafficking: Privacy Implications

Felicity Gerry; Julia Muraszkiewicz; Niovi Vavoula


Archive | 2016

Vulnerable Witnesses and Parties in all Civil Proceedings - Dignity, Respect and The Advocate's Gateway Toolkit 17

Felicity Gerry


Archive | 2016

Gender Issues in Human Trafficking: Empowering Women and Girls Through Awareness and Law

Felicity Gerry; Catarina Sjölin


Archive | 2016

Human Trafficking in the Drug Trade: Lessons for Attorneys from the Mary Jane Veloso Case

Felicity Gerry


National Judicial College of Australia Conference | 2016

Women in prison in Australia

Felicity Gerry

Collaboration


Dive into the Felicity Gerry's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Catarina Sjölin

Nottingham Trent University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Suzanne Belton

Charles Darwin University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Niovi Vavoula

Queen Mary University of London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge