Population Services International (Australasia) Ltd.
Following subsequent stints with PSI in Tunisia and India, where Davis previously had operated clinics providing abortion services during the 1960s, prior to partial legalization of abortion in New South Wales in 1971. The Potts Point clinic became headquarters of PSI Australasia Ltd. The services offered by the new PSI clinics differed in two substantial ways from services being delivered by existing abortion clinics, including its main competitor,
Preterm Foundation. PSI offered much later-stage abortions, beyond the Preterm limitation of nine weeks' gestation, and PSI abortions were performed under general anesthetic, rather than the then-customary local anesthetic. In the early morning of 7 April 1975, a fire broke out on the ground floor of the premises housing Preterm Foundation, gutting the entire building, destroying the clinic and all its equipment The police arson squad investigated but never established a definitive cause of the fire. Feminist healthworkers at
Control, Preterm and the PSI clinics implicated Davis in the fire. Preterm director Dorothy Nolan indicated "darker suspicions", later telling the
Sydney Morning Herald newspaper that a doctor "who had run a lucrative abortion business in Arncliffe" had been making repeated threatening phone calls to her home. The only
abortion clinic legally operating in Arncliffe at the time was run by PSI. Nolan said she always believed the unnamed doctor paid to have the fire set at Preterm because it had been undercutting his business. "There was a strong suspicion but we never had proof," Nolan said. They also noted Davis was said to have been "one of the first on the scene" on the morning of the Preterm fire. PSI's profit-oriented "assembly line" treatment of patients, poor working conditions and arbitrary sackings of staff members, six feminist staffers from the Arncliffe and Potts Point clinics resigned from PSI in protest. Vowing to expose the conditions at PSI and to work toward
creating a feminist-controlled alternative, the staffers proceeded to lobby members of the
Australian Parliament, gave media interviews and produced, published and distributed a pamphlet that was highly critical of Davis and PSI, titled
ABORTION: OUR BODIES, THEIR POWER. In a June 1977 during a closed-door meeting in Canberra of the
Royal Commission on Human Relationships, the women submitted confidential testimony outlining conditions and practices at PSI clinics. During 1977 Parliamentary debate sparked by PSI's intention to open an abortion clinic in the
Australian Capital Territory, Davis and other PSI board members were accused of "profiteering" from PSI's abortion business in Australia and a web of interconnected medical business and property holdings were denounced by hostile members of Parliament. The details of those business and property holdings were also in the possession of the six PSI staff who resigned in protest in December 1976 and were subsequently published in the pamphlet
ABORTION: OUR BODIES, THEIR POWER. == Medical malpractice allegations ==