Abortion Increases Women’s Mortality Rate

New Study Shows Women’s Death Rate Following Abortion Much Higher than Previously Known

Springfield, IL (August 2, 2002)–A study published in the August edition of the Southern Medical Journal reveals that women who have abortions are at significantly higher risk of near and long term death than women who give birth. This contradicts the widely accepted opinion that abortion is safer than childbirth.

Researchers examined death records linked to Medi-Cal payments for births and abortions for approximately 173,000 low income Californian women. They discovered that women who had abortions were almost twice as likely to die in the following two years. They also discovered that the elevated mortality rate of aborting women persisted over at least eight years. Over the eight year period studied, women who aborted had a 154 percent higher risk of death from suicide, an 82 percent higher risk of death from accidents, and a 44 percent higher risk of death from natural causes.

This is the second large record based study to find elevated mortality rates among women following an abortion. In 1997, a government funded study of maternal deaths in Finland sent a tremor of worry through family planning agencies when it revealed that in the first year following an abortion, aborting women were 252 percent more likely to die compared to women who delivered and 76 percent more likely to die compared to women who had not been pregnant. Many of the extra deaths were due to suicide.

The new study confirms the trend found in Finland using a large sample of American women. In addition, where the Finland study was limited to a one year follow-up, the new study reveals higher mortality rates persist over at least eight years.

According to the study’s lead author, David Reardon, Ph.D., director of the Elliot Institute based in Springfield, IL, the causes of death shifted during the period studied.

“During the first four years, higher rates of death from suicide and heightened risk taking behavior were the most pronounced area of difference,” Reardon said. “In later years, deaths due to natural causes rose. This may reflect longer term damage that increased rates of depression, anxiety, and self-neglect can inflict on women’s cardiovascular and immune systems.”

New Approach Eliminates Uncertainties

Critics of abortion have long complained about the widely acknowledged inaccuracies of abortion mortality figures. There are no federal or state regulations requiring abortion complications. Indeed, the international classification codes for identifying cause of death do not even provide a means for identifying surgical abortion as a cause of death.

Even if there was a method for reporting abortion related deaths, the accuracy of such reports would still limited by the judgment of coroners regarding the underlying cause of death. Deaths from suicide or protracted infections, for example, may be difficult to attribute to a specific underlying cause.

“Government researchers in Finland paved the way out of this quagmire of uncertainty,” Reardon said. “By linking death certificates directly to payment records for births and abortions, we can finally get an accurate picture of what is really going on. This is the first American study to use a uniform and objective standard for comparing deaths associated with abortion and birth.”

Asked if these findings will lead to general recognition that mortality rates associated with abortion are higher than those for childbirth, Reardon expressed a fear that the new findings will be ignored by abortion advocates.

“Five years ago, when Finland published the one impeccable record-based study of death rates, the results were completely ignored by abortion advocates,” he said. “If the results had been the opposite, they would have been shouted from the rooftops. But since the population control lobby is anxious to see abortion legalized in developing countries, they have a vested interest in promoting the myth that abortion is safer than childbirth, so the results were ignored.”

Reardon said that the various claims that abortion is six, twelve, or even twenty times safer than childbirth were all constructed by combining a “hodgepodge of studies” that rely on incomplete data. He noted that these prior estimates are “at best, educated guesses. At worst, they are examples of propaganda dressed up as science. In either case, these favorite estimates are deeply entrenched in family planning literature and have not been corrected in light of the Finland research. It is likely many abortion advocates will continue to hold to them despite our findings as well.”

Depression Over Abortion May Explain Increased Suicide Rates

Reardon is especially concerned about the higher risk of deaths from suicides. The Finland study revealed a seven fold increased rate of deaths from suicide among aborting women. Suicide is a leading cause of death among young women. In an Elliot Institute survey of women complaining of post-abortion distress, 56 percent reported suicidal feelings and 28 percent actually attempted suicide, with over half of these attempting suicide more than once.

The explanation for higher suicide rates, Reardon believes, can be found in another Elliot Institute study of 1,076 women faced with unplanned pregnancies that was published earlier this year in the British Medical Journal. It revealed that subsequent long-term clinical depression was more common among those who had abortions.

Yet another Elliot Institute study published in the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry this year revealed that aborting women are significantly more likely to require subsequent psychiatric treatments compared to delivering women. This study examined Medi-Cal payments for outpatient psychiatric care over a four year period. Abortion was most strongly associated with subsequent treatments for neurotic depression, bipolar disorder, adjustment reactions, and schizophrenic disorders.

Since all three of the recently published Elliot Institute studies control for prior psychiatric state, Reardon says the differences between aborting and delivering women cannot be explained simply on differences in prior psychological health.

“We have been looking at large samples of women who are have similar in socioeconomic and psychological profiles,” he said. “Abortion is clearly associated with a worsening of mental health and higher mortality rates. By contrast, giving birth appears to protect mental health and lower mortality rates. The latter is especially evident in the Finland studies.”

More Outreach, Counseling, and Research Recommended

Reardon believes the results these recent studies underscore a key message of a new book, Forbidden Grief: The Unspoken Pain of Abortion, which he co-authored with Dr. Theresa Burke, an expert in post-abortion counseling.

“We need to expand outreach and referrals into post-abortion counseling programs,” he said. “There are many women who have great difficulty coping with the emotional stress following an abortion. Without help, and especially the understanding of loved ones, they will be more vulnerable to self-destructive behavior and other psychological disorders.”

Public interest in the health effects of abortion was last raised in 1989 when Surgeon General C. Everett Koop reviewed the research on abortion at the request of President Ronald Reagan. Koop concluded that all the studies done up to that point was so methodologically flawed that no firm conclusions could be drawn about abortion’s risks or benefits.

In a letter to the outgoing president, Koop recommended that a major federally funded longitudinal study of abortions health risks was the only way to secure definitive answers. His proposal for a major study died in the Democratically controlled congress, however, when abortion advocates argued that the appeal for such research was politically motivated and a waste of taxpayer dollars.

Reardon hopes the results of recent studies will rekindle the effort to make the investigation of abortion’s health effects a priority of the government’s National Institutes of Health.

“The government has ignored this problem for decades, largely at the behest of population control groups which are more concerned about protecting abortion than protecting women,” Reardon said. “I believe women deserve better. They deserve to know the true relative risk associated with abortion. If the government had acted on Koop’s recommendation, we would have had definitive answers by now.”


Citing:

Reardon DC, Ney PG , Scheuren FJ, Cougle JR, Coleman, PK, Strahan T. “Deaths associated with pregnancy outcome: a record linkage study of low income women.” Southern Medical Journal, August 2002, 95(8):834-841.

Posted online with permission from publisher in Adobe Acrobat format (pdf). Copyright 2002 Southern Medical Journal.

Note: For additional information and commentary on the Finland mortality studies in context with other studies related to abortion mortality, see the previously published review articles in The Post-Abortion Review, Volume 8 Number 2.

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