1 month ago 10th May 12:01
In a medical abortion, a woman normally takes tablets during two separate visits a few days apart.
This can only be carried out at the moment in licensed premises, such as hospitals, approved NHS providers such as Marie Stopes and private clinics.
The pilot compared abortions in a community hospital and health unit, where nurses supervised the women rather than specialist doctors, with three existing sites.
It found that none of the sites were more likely to report complications and the results also suggested that women liked the "informality" and increased availability of support from staff in the pilot sites.
A spokeswoman for Marie Stopes welcomed the move, adding "it would significantly increase the choices available to women facing unplanned pregnancy".
A Department of Health spokeswoman said it was unlikely most GP surgeries would meet the standards necessary to provide early medical abortion.
It comes ahead of a debate about abortion later this month.
MPs are expected to propose both the relaxing and tightening of abortion rules in what will be a free vote on the issue.
One suggestion is that the 24-week limit for an abortion should be reduced, possibly to 20 weeks, while pro-choice MPs want to see access eased by scrapping the two-doctor rule needed to get permission for a termination.
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