The situation in healthcare in the country has changed radically in the past few years. Driven by a declining birth rate and a strong state-backed push for traditional values, lawmakers have introduced severe Russia abortion restrictions 2026. Recently, strict laws against the coercion or inducement of the termination of pregnancy have been enacted in the authorities in more than 30 regions.
Instead of offering any support, the actions cause a sense of fear among medical practitioners and now they are liable to pay high fines even when they talk about abortion as a medical alternative, as The Moscow Times reports.
These new legal and administrative barriers directly undermine women’s reproductive rights. The recent reports by the Human Rights Watch indicate that hundreds of privately owned clinics in the country have been coerced into giving up their license to perform abortions. Moreover, the re-scheduling of safe abortion drugs by the government as controlled substances compels the pregnant to travel long distances to already busy state hospitals. This unaccessibility puts bodily autonomy at great risk, and this burden falls more on low-income groups, which The Insider was able to illustrate.
The primary driving force behind these systemic healthcare crackdowns is an aggressive approach to Russian demographic policies. As the national population continues to reduce, regional governors have found a common ground with the church in making reproductive control an issue of national security. Even incentives are provided to doctors who persuade patients to keep their pregnancies as reported by Meduza.
Nevertheless, health bodies across the world have pointed out that the limitation of access is not a sustainable method of increasing birth rates. Rather, such policies deny women their basic liberties and compel them to resort to illegal procurement of the same.
Human Rights Watch on X (Official)
No, abortion remains technically legal under federal law. However, severe regional restrictions, strict licensing hurdles, and bans on “inducing” abortions have made accessing the procedure practically impossible in many areas.
The government is implementing these laws as part of new demographic policies aimed at reversing Russia’s declining birth rate, heavily influenced by state-promoted “traditional values” and the Russian Orthodox Church.
Hundreds of private clinics have been pressured by regional authorities to voluntarily surrender their licenses to perform abortions. Those that remain face strict regulations and heavy fines if accused of “coercing” patients into the procedure.
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