Abortion Rate Is the Same Whether Its Legal Or Illegal Posted: 10-15-07 15:27pm
From CNN today
Story Highlights
Report: Worldwide, one in five pregnancies
ends in abortion
Report: About 70,000 women die every year
from unsafe abortions
Report: Eastern Europe has 105 abortions
for every 100 live births
U.S. government aid funds cannot be used
in services associated with abortion
LONDON, England (AP) -- Women are just as
likely to get an abortion in countries
where it is outlawed as they are in
countries where it is legal, according to
research published Friday.
In a study examining abortion trends from
1995 to 2003, experts also found that
abortion rates are virtually equal in rich
and poor countries, and that half of all
abortions worldwide are unsafe.
The study was done by Gilda Sedgh of the
Guttmacher Institute in the United States
and colleagues from the World Health
Organization. It was published in an
edition of The Lancet medical journal
devoted to maternal health.
"The legal status of abortion has never
dissuaded women and couples, who, for
whatever reason, seek to end pregnancy,"
Beth Fredrick of the International Women's
Health Coalition in the U.S. said in an
accompanying commentary.
Abortion
accounts for 13 percent of maternal
mortality worldwide. About 70,000 women
die every year from unsafe abortions. An
additional 5 million women suffer
permanent or temporary
injury.
"The continuing high incidence of unsafe
abortion in developing countries
represents a public health crisis and a
human rights atrocity," Fredrick wrote.
The number of worldwide abortions has
dipped from about 46 million in 1995 to
just under 42 million in 2003. But there
was no change in the rate of unsafe
abortions; nearly half the procedures are
still performed illegally in potentially
dangerous conditions.
"The only way to decrease unsafe abortion
is to increase contraception," said Sharon
Camp, president and chief executive
officer of the Guttmacher Institute.
Camp said that more countries are allowing
women to have abortions legally, but many
women only receive medical attention after
a procedure has gone wrong. "I don't think
women should have to hurt themselves
before they get medical treatment," she
said.
The vast majority of abortions -- 35
million -- were in the developing world.
And nearly 97 percent of all unsafe
abortions were in poor countries.
Worldwide, one in five pregnancies ends in
abortion.
The study defined unsafe abortions as
those performed either by people lacking
the necessary skills or in an environment
that does not conform to minimum medical
standards.
In eastern Europe, there are more
abortions than live births: 105 abortions
for every 100 live births, the research
found. In Western Europe, there are 23
abortions for every 100 live births.
In North America, there are 33 abortions
for every 100 live births, while in
Africa, where abortion is illegal in most
countries, there are 17 abortions for
every 100 live births.
Improving women's health, experts said,
means improving access to safe abortions.
Some experts criticized the restrictions
that often come with donor money. Funds
from the U.S. government, for example,
cannot be used in any health services
associated with abortion.
Because providing safe abortions depends
on a working health-care system, experts
said tackling the problem is difficult.
In related papers published in The Lancet
this week, experts said there has been
little improvement in helping women
survive pregnancy and childbirth in the
last two decades, particularly in the
world's poorest countries.
Unlike improving child health, which can
be done relatively easily by things like
immunizing children against various
diseases, "you can't give women a pill for
obstetric complications," said Ann Starrs,
executive vice president for Family Care
International in the U.S., who was not
linked to the study.
Competing with other health issues for
limited health dollars is also a problem.
"Donors love to distribute bed nets for
malaria because it's simple to do and it's
easy to show the progress you've made,"
said Dr. Lale Say, a WHO maternal health
expert. "But unfortunately for women's
health, there is no single strategy that
will work everywhere."
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