Detrimental Effects of Adolescent Abortion

By Amy R. Sobie and David C. Reardon, Ph.D.

About 20 percent of all abortions taking place in the U.S. today are performed on teens.(1) Teenage abortion has been linked to a number of physical and psychological problems, including drug and alcohol abuse,(2) suicide attempts and suicidal ideation,(3) and other self-destructive behaviors.

Compared to women who abort at an older age, women who abort as teens are significantly more likely to report more severe emotional injuries related to their abortions.(4) This finding is supported by the fact that women who aborted as teens participate in disproportionately large numbers in post-abortion counseling programs.(5) In the WEBA study of post-abortive women, for example, more than 40 percent of the women had been teenagers at the time of their abortions.(6)

The Psychological Risks

Compared to women who have abortions in adulthood, teens who abort:

  • Are two to four times more likely to commit suicide.(7)
  • Are more likely to develop psychological problems.(8)
  • Are more likely to have troubled relationships.(9)
  • Are generally in need of more counseling and guidance regarding abortion.(10)
  • Are nearly three times more likely to be admitted to mental health hospitals than women in general.(11)

Studies have shown that the major factors in pregnancy decision making among teens are the attitude of the teen’s parents, the baby’s father, and her peers; the personality of the teen herself; and the cultural and public policy attitudes toward abortion by which she is surrounded.(12) Compared to older women, teens are more likely to abort because of pressure from their parents or sexual partners,(13) putting them at higher risk for adverse psychological effects after abortion.

Teens are also more likely to report having wanted to keep the baby, higher levels of feeling misinformed in pre-abortion counseling, less satisfaction with abortion services and greater post-abortion stress.(14) They consider the abortion procedure itself to be stressful and associated with feelings of guilt, depression and a sense of isolation.(15) Researchers have also found that reports of more severe pain during abortion among younger women are linked to greater levels of anxiety and fear prior to the abortion.(16)

Younger women have a more difficult time adjusting to their abortions. One study found that teenage aborters were more likely to report severe nightmares following abortion and to score higher on scales measuring antisocial traits, paranoia, drug abuse and psychotic delusions than older aborters. Teens were also more likely to use immature coping strategies such as projection of their problems onto others, denial or “acting out” than older women–strategies researchers speculate might become permanent.(17)

Replacement Pregnancies

Another study found that less than one fourth of teens were able to achieve a healthy psychological adaptive process after their abortions, and many continued to reenact their trauma through a cycle of repeat pregnancies and abortions.(18) One study found that on average, 59 percent of teens who had experienced a pregnancy loss–generally due to induced abortion–become pregnant again within 15 months.(19) In another study, 18 percent of teenage abortion patients had become pregnant again within two years.(20)

Repeat pregnancies are often a symptom of young women “acting out” unresolved abortion issues and the desire to “replace” the lost pregnancy with another child. Unfortunately, “replacement babies” are often aborted because the woman faces the same pressures as she did the first time, and sometimes even more. For example, a New York City study found that teens who had one previous abortion were four times more likely to abort their current pregnancy than girls experiencing their first pregnancy.(21) Another study of teen abortion in Los Angeles found that 38 percent of the teens had undergone an earlier abortion and 18 percent had undergone two abortions in the same year.(22)

Sometimes a teen who has been especially traumatized will choose abortion as a form of self-punishment or as an unconscious attempt to resolve her trauma by continually repeating it. In other cases, she may be hoping to continue her pregnancy but will feel pressured by her parents or partner to submit to an abortion as “what is best for everyone.” In one heart-wrenching example, a teenage girl reported that she was forced by her mother to abort four times before she was finally able to insist on keeping her fifth baby.(23)

The Physical Risks

Teenage abortion patients are up to twice as likely to experience cervical lacerations during abortion compared to older women.(24) This increased risk is thought to be due to the fact that teens have smaller cervixes which are more difficult to dilate or grasp with instruments.

Teens are also at higher risk for post-abortion infections such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and endometritis (inflamation of the uterus), which may be caused either by the spread of an unrecognized sexually transmitted disease into the uterus during the abortion, or by micro-organisms on the surgical instruments which are inserted into the uterus.(25) Researchers believe that teens may be more susceptible to infections because their bodies are not yet fully developed and do not produce pathogens that are found in the cervical mucus of older women and which can protect them from infection.(26)

Other studies have shown that young women who have had PID previously or who have not had a previous full-term birth are more vulnerable to post-abortion infections.(27) In addition, because teens are less likely than adults to take prescribed antibiotics or follow other regimens for the treatment of medical problems such as infection, they are at greater risk for infertility, hysterectomy, ectopic pregnancy and other serious complications.(28)

Because teens are more likely to abort their first pregnancy, they face other risks as well.(29) For instance, research has shown that an early full term birth can reduce a woman’s risk of breast cancer, but that induced abortion of a first pregnancy carries a 30 to 50 percent increased risk of breast cancer.(30) In addition, aborting teens lose the protective effect of having a full-term pregnancy at a younger age, which reduces breast cancer risk.

Complications of Late-Term Abortions

The Centers for Disease Control has reported that 30 percent of teenage abortions occur at or after 13 weeks gestation, compared to only 12 percent of abortions overall.(31) The high rate of late-term abortions among teens is a symptom of how they feel trapped into abortions that they cannot evade.

Women who undergo late-term abortions often delay having the abortion precisely because (1) they have mixed feelings about the decision or feel less satisfied with it, (2) they have religious or moral objections to abortion, or (3) they have a more favorable attitude toward the unborn baby than women who have abortions in the first trimester.(32) Greater ambivalence about abortion increases the likelihood that women will resist advice and pressure from others to abort for a longer period of time, hoping with each passing week that more support for keeping the baby will materialize.

In this regard, polls have consistently found that more teens have pro-life or anti-abortion attitudes than do older women, which may help to explain the much higher late-term abortion rate among teens. No doubt another factor is that teens are more likely to conceal their pregnancies, either out of shame or in an effort to avoid being pressured into an unwanted abortion. After all, many teens know well in advance that their parents or boyfriends will support only one choice: abortion. But teens who conceal their pregnancies are never truly safe from the pressure to abort. Since abortion is legal during all nine months of pregnancy, it’s never too late for parents or others to begin pressuring a girl into an abortion once her pregnancy is discovered or revealed.

Late-term abortions, and all of the factors related to ambivalence–such as delay, concealment of the pregnancy, and feeling pressured to abort–are significantly associated with more severe emotional and psychological problems after abortion.(33) Teens who abort in the second and third trimester also face a greater risk of physical complications, including higher rates of endometritis,(34) intrauterine adhesions, PID, cervical incompetence, subsequent miscarriages and ectopic pregnancies, rupture of the uterus and death.(35) In addition, dilation and extraction abortions, frequently used in the second trimester, are associated with low birth weight in later pregnancies,(36) which can cause various health and developmental problems for the baby, including cerebral palsy.(37)

Conclusion

The pro-abortion Alan Guttmacher Institute estimates that approximately 40 percent of teenage abortions take place without parental involvement.(38) As a result, these teens’ parents have no advance warning about the physical or emotional complications their children may experience. When the abortion causes subsequent emotional reactions that are not understood–such as depression, anger, and substance abuse–parents may react with anger and confusion, exacerbating the problems of the teen and her family.

The cost of such concealment can be dreadfully high. Both 16-year-old Erica Richardson of Maryland and 13-year-old Dawn Ravanell of New York died from complications after they had abortions without telling their parents.(39) Sandra Kaiser, a 14-year-old St. Louis girl with a history of psychiatric problems, committed suicide three weeks after her half-sister took her for an abortion without telling Sandra’s mother.(40)

Sadly, abortion advocates have continued to fight laws that could help prevent tragedies like these. Most recently, the pro-abortion lobby has vigorously opposed attempts in Congress to pass legislation that would make it a federal offense for anyone to evade a state’s parental notice laws by taking a teen for an abortion in another state that does not have such laws. This legislation wouldn’t prevent all teen abortions, but at least it would protect the rights of parents and their daughters.

As shown above, numerous studies have found that, compared to older women, younger women–especially adolescents–are at significantly higher risk of physical and psychological complications following abortion. But this information is not generally known by the public, and certainly not by the parents who pressure their daughters into abortions.

In many of these cases, the parents truly believe they are helping to protect their daughter’s future. They have no idea that they are subjecting her to a physical and psychological trauma that will forever scar her life. Nor will the abortion clinics, who have a vested interest in keeping the dangers of abortion secret, explain the full range of risks to teenagers, their parents, or–in the case of judicial bypass–the judges who stand in the place of the parents.

Abortion is fraught with dangers and risks, especially for younger women who are at greater risk of suffering both physical and psychological complications. The deceptive business practices of abortion clinics–which conceal these risks from these teenaged girls, their parents, and even judges–are nothing less than criminal.


Learn more: Read our special e-mail report on Teens and Abortion.

Share more: Download and share our Teen Abortion Risk fact sheet.

Originally printed in The Post-Abortion Review, Vol. 9(1), Jan.-March 2001. Copyright 2001, Elliot Institute.

Citations

1. L.M. Koonin et. al., “Abortion Surveillance United States, 1996, Centers for Disease Control,” MMWR, 48(SS4):1, July 30, 1999.


2. H. Amaro, et al., “Drug use among adolescent mothers: profile of risk,” Pediatrics, 84:144-150, 1989.


3. B. Garfinkel, et al., “Stress, Depression and Suicide: A Study of Adolescents in Minnesota,” Responding to High Risk Youth (University of Minnesota: Minnesota Extension Service, 1986)


4. W. Franz and D. Reardon, “Differential Impact of Abortion on Adolescents and Adults,” Adolescence, 27(105):172, 1992.


5. T. Strahan, “Differential Adverse Impact of Abortion on Teenagers Who Undergo Induced Abortion,” Assoc. for Interdisciplinary Research Bulletin, 15(1):3, March/April 2000.


6. D. Reardon, “Psychological Reactions Reported After Abortion,” The Post-Abortion Review, 2(3):4-8, Fall 1994.


7. M. Gissler, et. al., “Suicides after pregnancy in Finland: 1987-94: register linkage study,” British Medical Journal, 313:1431-1434, 1996; and N. Campbell, et al., “Abortion in Adolescence,” Adolescence, 23:813-823, 1988.


8. W. Franz and D. Reardon, op. cit..


9. J. Marecek, “Consequences of Adolescent Childbearing and Abortion,” in G. Melton (ed.), Adolescent Abortion: Psychological & Legal Issues (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press 1986) 96-115.


10. J. Gold, “Adolescents and Abortion,” in N. Stotland (ed.), Psychiatric Aspects of Abortion (Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, 1989) 187-195.


11. R. Somers, “Risk of Admission to Psychiatric Institutions Among Danish Women who Experienced Induced Abortion: An Analysis Based on National Report Linkage,” (Ph.D. Dissertation, Los Angeles: University of California, 1979. Dissertation Abstracts International, Public Health 2621-B, Order No. 7926066)


12. T. Strahan, “Factors in Pregnancy Decision Making by Teenagers,” Assoc. for Interdisciplinary Research Newsletter, 7(4):1, Jan./Feb. 1995.


13. P. Barglow and S. Weinstein, “Therapeutic Abortion During Adolescence: Psychiatric Observations,” J. of Youth and Adolescence, 2(4):33,1973.


14. W. Franz and D. Reardon, op. cit.


15. F. Biro, et al., “Acute and Long-Term Consequences of Adolescents Who Choose Abortions,” Pediatric Annals, 15(10):667-672, 1986.


16. E. Belanger, et. al., “Pain of First Trimester Abortion: A Study of Psychosocial and Medical Predictors,” Pain, 36:339; and G.M. Smith, et. al., “Pain of first-trimester abortion: Its quantification and relationships with other variables,” American Journal Obstetrics & Gynecology, 133:489, 1979.


17. N. Campbell, op. cit.


18. Horowitz, “Adolescent Mourning Reactions to Infant and Fetal Loss,” Soc. Casework, 59:551, 558-559, 1978.


19. S.R. Wheeler, “Adolescent Pregnancy Loss,” in J.R. Woods, Jr. and J.L. Woods (eds.), Loss During Pregnancy or the Newborn Period (Publisher, 1997).


20. H. Cvejic et. al., “Follow-up of 50 adolescent girls 2 years after abortion,” Canadian Medical Assoc. Journal, 116:44, 1997.


21. T. Joyce, “The Social and Economic Correlates of Pregnancy Resolution Among Adolescents in New York by Race and Ethnicity: A Mulitvariate Analysis,” American J. of Public Health, 78(6):626, 1988.


22. R. Bobrowsky, “Incidence of Repeat Abortion, Second Trimester Abortion, Contraceptive Use and Illness Within a Teenage Population,” Unpublished Doctoral Thesis, 1996.


23. C. Nykiel, “Nobody Told Me I Could Cry,” The Post-Abortion Review, 7(1):1-2, Jan-March 1999.


24. R.T. Burkman, et. al., “Morbidity Risk Among Young Adolescents Undergoing Elective Abortion,” Contraception, 30(2):99, 1984; and K.F. Schulz, et. al., “Measures to Prevent Cervical Injury During Suction Curettage Abortion,” The Lancet, 1182-1184, May 28, 1993 .


25. R.T. Burkman, et. al., “Culture and treatment results in endometritis following elective abortion,” American J. Obstet. & Gynecol., 128:556, 1997; and D. Avonts and P. Piot, “Genital infections in women undergoing induced abortion,” European J. Obstet. & Gynecol. & Reproductive Biology, 20:53, 1985.


26. W. Cates, Jr., “Teenagers and Sexual Risk-Taking: The Best of Times and the Worst of Times,” Journal of Adolescent Health, 12:84, 1991.


27. J.L. Sorenson and I. Thronov, “A double blind randomized study of the effect of erythromycin in preventing pelvic inflammatory disease after first trimester abortion,” British J. Obstet. & Gynecol., 99:434, 1992.


28. “Teenage Pregnancy: Overall Trends and State-by-State Information,” Report by the Alan Guttmacher Institute.


29. K.D. Kochanck, “Induced Terminations of Pregnancy, Reporting States 1988,” Monthly Vital Statistics Report, 39(12): Suppl. 1-32, April 30, 1991.


30. J. Brind, et. al., “Induced abortion as an independent risk factor for breast cancer: a comprehensive review and analysis,” J. Epidemiology & Community Health, 50:481, 1996.


31. Strahan, “Differential Adverse Impact on Teenagers Who Undergo Induced Abortion,” op. cit..


32. T. Strahan, “Psycho-Social Aspects of Late-Term Abortions,” Assoc. For Interdisciplinary Research Bulletin, 14(4):1, 2000.


33. D. Reardon, Making Abortion Rare (Springfield, IL: Acorn Books, 1996) 162.


34. R. T. Burkman, et. al, “Culture and treatment results in endometritis following elective abortion,” op cit..


35. S. Lurie and Z. Shoham, “Induced Midtrimester Abortion and Future Fertility: Where Are We Today?” International J. of Fertility, 40(6):311, 1995.


36. H.K. Atrash and C.J. Hogue, “The effect of pregnancy termination on future reproduction,” Baillieres Clinic Obstet. & Gynecol., 4(2):391, 1990.


37. B. Rooney, “Is Cerebral Palsy Ever a Choice?” The Post-Abortion Review, 8(4):4-5, Oct.-Dec. 2000.


38. “Teenage Pregnancy: Overall Trends and State-by-State Information,” op. cit.


39. K. Sherlock, Victims of Choice (Akron: Brennyman Books, 1996) 31-32, 40-41.


40. R. Kerrison, “Horror Tale of Abortion,” New York Post, Jan. 7, 1991.

17 thoughts on “Detrimental Effects of Adolescent Abortion

  1. i am thinking of having an abortion, because am scared of keeping d baby… pls what can i take to push out d pregnancy??(its one month old)

    1. I’m so sorry you are in this situation, and feel so scared about having this baby. Please, whatever you do, don’t try anything that would cause you to abort or miscarry on your own, like taking something — this is very dangerous! You need to talk with someone who is professional about your circumstances and your options, and find real help. I don’t know your circumstances, but please know that your situation is not as helpless as it seems and you do have options other than abortion.

      If you are in the US, I would start by reaching out for help to one of the groups listed on this help page or to OptionLine, which is a nationwide network of pregnancy help centers (you can also contact them by texting HELPLINE to 313131 or talking to them via Live Chat). If you are outside the US, send me an email at elliotinstitute@gmail.com and I will try and put you in touch with someone in your area who can help. Please contact us or one of these organization so we can try to get you some help — don’t try to do this on your own as this is very risky!

      1. Just wanted to add a few things to my reply above. First, have you taken a test to know for sure that you are pregnant, or had the pregnancy confirmed by a doctor or health professional? Early tests are not always accurate, so please make sure you have your pregnancy confirmed so you are not putting yourself through unnecessary stress.

        I don’t know the circumstances that have you scared of keeping the baby. Is the father involved at all? Do you have family support? Again, these are all things that a counselor or support person can help you sort out. Please don’t think that having an abortion is the only option, even if you are on your own. If you are uncertain, the best thing to do is take some time to think about your situation, find out what support you have and make the best choice for both you and the child. Having an abortion because your feel pressured to do so or that you don’t have any other choice is more likely to cause pain or regret down the road.

        You don’t have to go through this on your own. Please contact one of the groups I mentioned above or get in touch with me at elliotinstitute@gmail.com. I’ll do my best to help or put you in touch with someone who can.

  2. i strongly believe that deciding to have an abortion or not is not a choice to be made by the teen’s parents but rather the teen herself. If she is willing to keep the life growing inside of her or choose for the unborn to go, because ultimately, this affects the teen and her perspective and NO ONE should force anything down her throat. Yes, she should consider her parents’ advice but this should be her decision to make.

  3. This is what it comes down to…I was a victim of forced abortion 20 years ago and I am still hurt, still grieving and still angry. I was 15 years old and though my parents “thought” this was the only option that I had to keep from ruining my life, they had no idea that what they forced me to do would traumatize me forever. I buried the memories for a long time of that horrible day but those memories have came back like an open infected wound! I am now, 20 years later, having to seek professional help. Abortion hurts everyone but when it is forced on you, when it is not your choice, when you are lied to about the size of your fetus and told that it is just a ” mass of tissue” you also feel like you were abused physically and mentally…for life!

    1. You are right, Steph. Your parents had no idea about how the abortion would affect you, and them. They believed the lie that abortion would turn back the clock and put everyone’s life back to the way it was before you became pregnant. I pray this insight into their ignorance has helped you to forgive them. The one person in the best position to prevent coerced abortions is the abortionist, who should be screening for circumstances where young women, such as yourself, are feeling pressured to abort by parents or boyfriends. They not only should refuse to do an abortion in such cases, they should sit the parents down and explain that this pressure to abort, plus other risk factors such as ambivalence, negative feelings about abortion are all predictors of more problems after an abortion. This is why we are encouraging more states to pass our model legislation requiring doctors to screen for these risk factors.

      I am glad that you are finally receiving professional help and pray that you will soon have a greater since of peace in your mind and heart.

      1. Thank you very much. You are exactly right about the doctors. Let me share this as well since you said that. My abortion appt was made by my parents without me even knowing. They drove me 3 hours away and took me to planned parenthood. The “pre counseling” counselor asked me very straight forward if this was my decision. My very straight forward answer to that was ” NO”. She left the room and came back with the dr. He asked me if this was my decision, once again, I answered “NO”! He looked in my face and asked, ” do you think I’m a murderer”? I said,Yes I do. His response was, ” I’m not because murderers go to prison. I’m not in prison, I’m a doctor”. I still refused the procedure so he goes out to the waiting room and gets my mom and stepdad. He tells them to take me home and give me 48 hours to think more about it. He also says not to wait any longer after the 48 hours or he wouldn’t be able to do the abortion. That’s because I was slipping out of my first and into my second trimester!! My stepdad, in front of the dr, yelled at me saying I would be back within 2 days to have this done and I took off running across the parking lot! 2 days later, that same doctor was inserting laminara sticks in my cervix to send me home to experience the worst pain I had ever had in my life! The same doctor that saw my stepdad yell at me saying “I was going to have this done, no matter what”! That doctor knew justnas well as he knew his name that having an abortion was NOT MY CHOICE at all!! He still took my baby away from me after experiencing first hand the abuse and coercedness that I was having to go through. I do not remember that doctors name, nor the clinic specifically that I was taken to. What I do know is that when a teenager is crying before, during and after whatever it is that she is having to experience, IT WAS FORCED ON HER!!!!

        1. I’m not surprised by what you describe. But I have to ask for the sake of clarification: Did the abortionist bother asking you the second time you showed up if it was your decision? Or did he just “assume” that since you had come back that it was and therefore he didn’t need to ask again? I’m guessing it was the latter.

    2. hey steph i am doing a research paper on abortion and how it feels afterwards im 14 and i was wondering if you are comfortable contacting me to help me with my paper? i would really like to hear from someone who has went through this

    3. As a 15 year old teenager I endured the same treatment from my Mother. I was 22 weeks pregnant. She was worried what her family & friends would think..she has Never apologized. She acts like my child Never existed. I had no closure. My baby was placed in a incinerator.

      Years later my sister had a very hard time getting pregnant then she miscarried at 22wks. To see my mother mourn over this child totally disgusted me. Saying that it was a real baby needless to say they had pictures & a burial my question is how could a So called Mother distinguish the two babys?

      My Story has always and will always have and had a major inmpact on me. I have those horrible images of my baby laying between my legs lifeless ….

      1. Dear Steph,

        Please reach out to a post-abortion recovery program using starting with our resource page. There are a lot of women who have been through very similar experiences who want to help you and guide you to a healthier place.

        I truly understand how much it hurts that your mother recognized the loss of your sister’s baby, but not yours. In time, she will come to understand that an abortion loss is just as real, and perhaps even more devastating, than a loss to miscarriage. But I pray you will try not to get hung up on your anger toward your mother. Focus on your own healing, and all the rest will fall into place later.

        You are in our prayers.

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