Indigenous women’s concerns about tubal ligation spark external review
SASKATOON — Saskatchewan’s largest health region has launched a review into concerns raised by some indigenous women who said they felt coerced into having tubal ligations after giving birth.
The women complained that they felt pressured by medical staff and others with the Saskatoon Health Region to undergo the procedure, which involves clamping or severing a woman’s fallopian tubes and is considered a permanent method of birth control.
Four women have spoken to the health region so far.
“They expressed to us that they felt pressure from a number of different sources,” said Leanne Smith, the health region’s director of maternal services.


