ABSTRACT In the run up to the referendum on abortion in Ireland in 2018, women shared experiences of being denied abortion care through social media. The ‘In Her Shoes’ dataset is a collection of archived Facebook posts in which women shared their experiences of obstetric coercion, lack of information and lack of consent to medical procedures during pregnancy and childbirth. Using women’s testimonies from the In Her Shoes database (https://repository.dri.ie/catalog/wm11nd02p), this research will critically analyse these stories. The paper will analyse women’s experiences in maternity care pre-2018 before the constitutional change. The article includes experiences of being denied treatment because of their pregnancy, being forced to continue the pregnancy when there was a risk to the woman’s health, as well as a lack of information and lack of consent to medical procedures. The article puts women’s experiences at the forefront of the research and analyses their experiences within a medical narrative framework. It argues that the Eighth Amendment, not just denied abortion care, but contributed towards a medical culture in which the patient’s experience was not central to that care. Since the removal of the Eighth Amendment, we should move towards a patient-centered care approach to maternity care in Ireland.