Not just “what’s the answer.” We all know the answer. But how do you respond? How do you answer a woman who’s afraid for her life, but isn’t confident enough yet to leave? Or isn’t sure she could survive on her own with ptsd and no job? Or is afraid to leave the children she has born with an abuser?
I’ve talked to these people before. I remember, talking to a woman who had gotten pregnant in a severe manic state, who was afraid her abusive parent (upon whom she was financially dependent due to her health and inability to acquire insurance) would injure her or throw her out on the street. What do you say?
You just listen. I wish I could tell you what to say, but people (everyone not just those we disagree with) don’t hear things that contradict their beliefs and could take offense for reasons we could not possibly imagine. This is especially true when they are under great stress. Anything that you could say could just as likely make things worse as better.
I wish I could point you to some quality organization that helps women in such circumstances, but too many of them have a political or religious goal that overrides the importance of the mission of helping out the woman (and child) in need. (We will help you but…) That is true for both the right and the left. The Catholic Church, IMHO, is one of the few institutions that has the right intentions for both the mother and the baby, but she does not have the resources, (either in money or people) to deal with the problem as it should be dealt with.
So listen and pray. Pray for her and for all of them and their children. And pray for all of our souls. For, like the rich man with Lazarus at his doorstep we have ignored these women (and even the individual babies killed by abortion). Too many on the right see only a potential monster and too many on the left care only about the choice of the woman who want to have an abortion and not about the choices of those who know that abortion is wrong.
I wish I had some useful advice for you, but the only thing I seem to be capable of is ranting against both sides for letting this happen. When elephants fight it is the grass that suffers. (or when an elephant fights a donkey

) Even now I am fighting the urge to lay in on both the liberals and the conservatives for pitting the weak against the weakest.
Pope Francis is right to emphasize compassion. If we fix the little things (like compassion for all but especially for the weak) then the bigger things (like abortion) will naturally fix themselves. But I worry that it is too little too late, but that may be due to my weakness of faith.
Show compassion and love through words and actions and all else will fall in place with prayer and patience.