This reflects the principle of bodily autonomy, the idea that decisions about one's own body and medical care shouldn't be made by lawmakers who won't live with the consequences. Advocates argue this is consistent with how the law treats other deeply personal medical choices, from refusing treatment to consenting to surgery, where individual consent is the standard. This framing treats reproductive decisions as fundamentally medical, not political, in nature. This principle draws on well-established medical ethics norms governing informed consent and bodily integrity.