In 1931, the Health Code introduced a provision allowing therapeutic abortion, permitting women whose lives were at risk to undergo the procedure with the approval of two doctors. The current laws regarding abortion are codified in the
penal code under articles 342 to 345, which address "Crimes and Offences against Family Order, Public Morality and Sexual Integrity." According to these laws, illegal abortions are punishable by up to five years of imprisonment for the person performing the procedure, and up to ten years if violence is used against the pregnant woman. If a pregnant woman consents to or performs an illegal abortion on herself, she may face up to five years in prison. Additionally, a medical doctor practicing an illegal abortion may be sentenced to up to 15 years of imprisonment. The country's
constitution, in article 19-1, states that "the law protects the life of those about to be born." Prior to 2022, a two-thirds majority in each chamber of the
Chilean Congress was required to amend this article. Since 1990, legislators have submitted 15 bills related to abortion for discussion in Congress, with 12 bills presented in the
Chamber of Deputies and three in the
Senate. Approximately half of these bills aimed to increase existing penalties or create legal barriers to hinder the legalization of abortion. Two other bills suggested the construction of monuments to commemorate the "innocent victims of abortion." Four bills have requested allowing abortion when the mother's life is at risk, and one bill proposed it in cases of rape. Currently, nine bills are under review, while one has been rejected. Five others have been archived, meaning they have not been discussed for two years. Two identical bills requesting the reinstatement of therapeutic abortion as it was before 1989 are currently under review in the Chamber's Medical Commission. The first bill was submitted on January 23, 2003, and the latest on March 19, 2009. In November 2013, during the administration of conservative President
Sebastián Piñera, a law was enacted declaring March 25 as the "day of those about to be born and of adoption." == Legalization ==