Liana Woskie, Mindy Jane Roseman
Monash Bioethics Review, 13 May 2025
Open Access
Abstract
In this piece we examine three forms of coercive or otherwise involuntary care that can occur with patient consent. To do so, we examine: (1) uninformed consent, (2) contingency-based consent and (3) constrained-market consent, amongst female sterilization patients. While there is broad recognition that “coercion” in sterilization care can manifest beyond instances of overt force and clarity on what constitutes coercion within clinical care, this has not translated to accountability. The current practice of identifying coercion through discrete civil cases may facilitate a narrow understanding of its contemporary prevalence; one that does not align with definitions of coercion supported by international human rights entities. We use three acute, and widely recognized, examples—hysterectomies in ICE detention facilities, India’s sterilization camp deaths and birth control quotas for Uyghur women—as an entry point to highlight less overt contemporary forms of coercive sterilization care, pairing each example with data that explores prevalence at a broader population level. These data suggest less visible forms of coercion may persist relatively unchallenged—raising the ethical case for a functional approach to the measurement of coercion. In turn, we argue the relevant question may not be “when is coercion ethically justified in public health,” but rather, why is coercion already the status quo?