Abstract

Many women identify sterilisation as their preferred form of contraception. However, their requests to be sterilised are frequently denied by doctors. Given a commitment to ensuring women’s reproductive autonomy, can these denials be justified? To answer this question, I assess the most commonly reported reasons for a denied sterilisation request: that the woman is too young, that she is child-free, that she will later regret her decision, and that it will lower her well-being. I argue that these worries are misplaced and hence insufficient reasons for denying a request. I also argue that even if concern for patient welfare provides doctors with a valid reason to withhold sterilisation, this is overriden by respect for patient autonomy and the importance of enabling women’s reproductive control. Consequently, I suggest that adequately informed, decision-competent women should have their requests for sterilisation agreed to, even if they are young and/or child-free. In addition, I examine the impact of pronatalism on how women’s requests are understood and responded to by doctors. I show that the equation of women with motherhood can make it unjustifiably hard for them to access sterilisation, especially if they are child-free. Consequently, part of ensuring women’s access to sterilisation involves challenging pronatalist beliefs and practices.

Highlights

  • In 2015, Holly Brockwell wrote an article in the Guardian newspaper about her struggle to be sterilised (Brockwell 2015)

  • I argue that even if concern for patient welfare does give doctors a valid reason to deny a sterilisation request, this can be overridden by respect for patient autonomy

  • I have argued that some women have good reason to request sterilisation, even when they can utilise other forms of contraception, and that these requests should be agreed to by doctors when made by decision-competent adults

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Summary

Introduction

In 2015, Holly Brockwell wrote an article in the Guardian newspaper about her struggle to be sterilised (Brockwell 2015). As I argue below, the importance of ensuring that women enjoy reproductive control, coupled with women’s dependence on doctors for access to IUDs and sterilisation, generates a positive obligation for doctors to provide these methods of contraception to decision-competent adult patients.

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