Women as a group require special protective measures in health care.

Gender-based discrimination occurs systematically. It also has implications for women’s health care such as:

  • female patients may be diagnosed slower
  • female patients may be treated less extensively than men
  • clinical trials often disregard women, focusing instead on middle-aged men
  • women may be subject to reproductive abuse

In order to ensure women’s reproductive health care, as well as to counter potential gender-based discrimination, the State should take additional measures to protect women’s right to health.

Gynaecological care

The State should ensure access to gynaecological care for all females. 

note In Lithuania, gynaecologists are direct access specialists – you do not need a referral from a general practitioner to visit one if the gynaecologist works at the same health care institution as your general practitioner.

Reproductive abuse and abortion

Reproductive abuse happens when a woman is not allowed to make her own decisions about her reproductive health. It can take different forms: coercion to get pregnant/give birth and limited or deprived access to contraception and abortion or forced abortion.

With regard to women’s decisions about pregnancy and abortions, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women prescribes that states ensure that all women have:

“(…) the same rights to decide freely and responsibly on the number and spacing of their children and to have access to the information, education and means to enable them to exercise these rights”;

Lithuanian law allows the termination of pregnancy at the woman’s request up to the 12th week of pregnancy. Prior to this, the State should ensure the possibility for a woman to receive a consultation from a general practitioner or another specialist (a psychotherapist, gynaecologist or another medical practitioner).

note Performing an abortion away from a hospital, against the will of a woman and forcing a woman to have an abortion are all criminal offences in Lithuania.

Read more about reproductive rights in this Guide.

Read more about artificial reproduction in this Guide.

Protection before and after childbirth

Pregnant women and women who have recently given birth are entitled to special protection:

       1. State-paid pregnancy care, birth assistance and post-natal care 

       2. prenatal and maternity leave 

       3. maternity benefit

Read more about woman’s access to healthcare during pregnancy and childbirth.

Read more about state support mechanisms regarding pregnancy, the birth of a child and family.

Resources

Last updated 18/08/2024