I have been clear.
Doctors are required on a daily basis to authorise procedures based on the medical aspects of all kinds of treatment. I said this ages ago. "What is the best course of action to treat the patient?". Ultimately the patient consents - so the final "approval" is always with the patient. A doctor can only carry out treatment that the patient has authorised, otherwise in the case of surgery they potentially commit assault. In 90% of abortions, there is no best course of action to treat the patient. They are simply given the two pills and get on with it. Even when the abortion is medical, it is often not the same team doing the "work" as those documenting the opinion.
In the case of abortion. Terminating a pregnancy is illegal unless two doctors have formed the opinion in good faith that the abortion meets the grounds that are defined as lawful. It is very clear in the law and also in the guidance to medical practitioners - This is not an approval of any kind. Neither is it a statement of fact or authorisation. It is simply a mechanism to make the unlawful termination, lawful. It does not include any moral or medical judgement and they are not accountable if it turns out that they were wrong (e.g. terminating on the grounds of minor disability post 24 weeks).