Abortion Is Hazardous to Your Mental Health
— Posted by John (August 14, 2006 at 2:38 pm)

The Elliot Institute reports on the latest evidence of the negative effects of abortion on women:
National Study Finds Teens Who Abort Are More Likely to Experience Subsequent Mental Health Problems Compared to Those Who Give Birth to Unplanned Children
Springfield, IL (Aug. 10, 2006) — Adolescent girls who abort unintended pregnancies are five times more likely to seek subsequent help for psychological and emotional problems compared to their peers who carry “unwanted pregnancies” to term, according to a new nationally representative study published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence.
Dr. Priscilla Coleman, a research psychologist at Bowling Green State University, also found that adolescents who had abortions were also over three times more likely to report subsequent trouble sleeping, and nine times more likely to report subsequent marijuana use. The results were compiled after examining 17 other control variables, like prior mental health history and family factors, that might also influence subsequent mental health.
The data was drawn from a federally-funded longitudinal study of adolescents from throughout the U.S. who participated in two series of interviews in 1995 and 1996. About 76 percent of girls who had abortions and 80 percent of girls who gave birth were between the ages of 15 and 19 during the survey, with the remainder being younger.
Researcher Dr. David Reardon, who has contributed to more than a dozen studies examining psychological outcomes after abortion, said that Coleman’s study was particularly important because it examines pregnancy “wantedness,” in addition to a large number of other control variables.
“Over the last six years, numerous studies have conclusively linked higher rates of mental illness and behavioral problems associated with abortion compared to childbirth.” said Reardon. “But abortion advocates have generally dismissed these findings, insisting that while women who abort may fare worse than women who give birth to planned children, they may fare better than the important subgroup of women who carry unintended pregnancies to term. Coleman’s study addresses this argument and shows that the facts don’t support abortion advocates’ speculations.”
According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, which tracks abortion statistics throughout the U.S., about a quarter of the abortions that take place each year are performed on girls younger than 20. Previous studies have found that younger abortion patients may be more likely to experience difficulties coping after abortion compared to older women, perhaps because they are more likely to be pressured into unwanted abortions or to undergo abortions later in the pregnancy, leading to more physical and emotional risk.
A 2004 survey of American and Russian women published in the Medical Science Monitor found that 64 percent of American women reported that they felt pressured into abortion. Coleman said that for teens, the pressure probably comes from the fact that they are more likely to be perceived as unready to be parents and that abortion is often seen by those around them as the best solution.
“When women feel forced into abortion by others or by life circumstances, negative post-abortion outcomes become more common,” she wrote. “Adolescents are generally much less prepared to assume the responsibility of parenthood and are logically the recipients of pressure to abort.”
Coleman pointed out that, while having a child as a teen may be problematic, “the risks of terminating seem to be even more pronounced.” Other studies comparing outcomes for abortion versus delivery of unintended pregnancies have found higher rates of clinical depression, anxiety, and substance abuse among women who abort, while studies that did not look only at unplanned pregnancies also find that women who aborted are at increased risk for suicidal behavior, psychiatric problems, symptoms of post-traumatic stress, and sleep disorders, which are often linked to trauma.
While previous studies have often been criticized for methodological shortcomings, studies that have come out in the last several years have been designed to address those problems and have gone through vigorous scrutiny from peer-review panels before publication, she added.
“The scientific evidence is now strong and compelling,” Coleman said. “Abortion poses more risks to women than giving birth.”
Reardon, who directs the Springfield, IL-based Elliot Institute, also said that while there has been a long-standing assumption that such problems are related to mental health problems that existed before abortion, a large-scale study conducted in New Zealand last year found that this wasn’t the case.
“The standard theory has been that women who have problems coping after abortion were probably already mentally unstable and therefore more likely to be even worse off if they continued the pregnancy,” he said. “The researchers in New Zealand thought that their study would confirm this theory, so they specifically controlled for pre-existing mental health problems. What they found, however, was that women who were mentally stable before abortion were still more likely to experience mental health problems after abortion.”
Although the pregnancy rate among American teens has dropped steadily in the past few decades, among developed countries the U.S. still has the highest rates of teen pregnancy and childbirth.
In her paper, Coleman highlighted a need for additional research on this issue. She pointed out that while “hundreds of thousands” of teens experience an unintended pregnancy each year, her study is one of only a few to examine the impact of abortion on women versus the impact of carrying to term, all of which have indicated worse outcomes associated with abortion.
Reardon echoed the call for more research, as well as the need for medical and mental health professionals to be attuned to the risks of abortion and present women and teens with accurate information about the physical and psychological effects of the procedure.
“The findings that are emerging show that abortion leads to negative outcomes for many women, regardless of whether the pregnancy was planned or wanted,” Reardon said. “Indeed, not a single study has ever shown statistically significant benefits associated with abortion compared to birth. In terms of maximizing women’s health and well-being, the scientific evidence overwhelmingly indicates that birth is preferable to abortion.” [NOTE: Emphasis added]
***
Source:
Priscilla K. Coleman, “Resolution of Unwanted Pregnancy During Adolescence Through Abortion Versus Childbirth: Individual and Family Predictors and Psychological Consequences,” Journal of Youth and Adolescence (2006).
Additional Studies:
VM Rue et. al., “Induced abortion and traumatic stress: A preliminary comparison of American and Russian women,” Medical Science Monitor 10(10): SR5-16 (2004).
David M. Fergusson, et. al., “Abortion in young women and subsequent mental health,” Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 47(1): 16-24 (2006).
My only comment is this:
Pro-lifers are frequently accusesd of basing their claims on pseudoscientific research and citing sources that have an overtly anti-abortion bias — accusations that fall flat in the face of the Journal of Youth and Adolescence, Medical Science Monitor, and the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
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lauren says:
I’m going to found the Lauren Institute, or how about the Lauren Foundation? does that sound dignified enough.. As soon as I do that, I’m going to start making up crap, make it look all professional, and then make press releases. FYI READERS: READ BELOW ABOUT ELLIOT INSTITUTE.. BIASED, ANTI-CHOICE group.. wow shocking that is!
From abortionfacts.com, an anti-choice website:
“One of our most frequently asked questions: Who is Elliot? Is he a wealthy philanthropist who has funded our work because he shares our belief that proving how abortion hurts so many women is the key to ending the scourge of abortion? We wish!
No, the name of the Elliot Institute for Social Sciences Research is not a memorial, but was chosen for purely pragmatic reasons. Among our many research projects, we have mailed out over 5000 surveys to random sample of women. To maximize response, and avoid skewing the results, we needed a neutral name. Indeed, in some of our surveys the population being sampled does not even know that we are particularly interested in women who have had abortions. Therefore, “The Post-Abortion Research Institute” was out of the question.
“Elliot” was literally picked from a baby names book. The personal name was added with the intention of making the name more personalized, yet formal and a bit stuffy - in an academic way. This was done with the hope to make the Institute’s name more “friendly,” yet plausible and dignified, for the sake of the recipients of our survey forms.
So, our name is not of any particular ”
YET PLAUSIBLE and DIGNIFIED… ahh appearances…
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 2:49 pm
mary kay says:
some people only see what they want to see…
…it says “reported” by, not done by.
“The data was drawn from a federally-funded longitudinal study of adolescents from throughout the U.S. who participated in two series of interviews in 1995 and 1996. About 76 percent of girls who had abortions and 80 percent of girls who gave birth were between the ages of 15 and 19 during the survey, with the remainder being younger.”
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 6:34 pm
mary kay says:
“The standard theory has been that women who have problems coping after abortion were probably already mentally unstable and therefore more likely to be even worse off if they continued the pregnancy,” he said. “The researchers in New Zealand thought that their study would confirm this theory, so they specifically controlled for pre-existing mental health problems. What they found, however, was that women who were mentally stable before abortion were still more likely to experience mental health problems after abortion.”
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 7:00 pm
mary kay says:
Why do I bother?
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 7:01 pm
mary kay says:
5 foetuses found dumped in Indian well, days after similar find
(AFP)
12 August 2006
NEW DELHI - Police found 25 foetuses dumped in a well in India where female abortions are common, days after a similar discovery, media reported on Saturday.
The decomposed foetuses were recovered close to another well where more than 15 foetuses were found earlier in the week near a medical clinic in northern Punjab state, the Times of India said.
Punjab has the worst gender ratio in India, with 798 girls for a thousand boys under the age of six, compared to the nationwide figure of 927, and the worldwide average of 1,050 females, because of large-scale female abortions.
The foetuses were to be sent for examination to find out their gender, the newspaper quoted sub-district magistrate Manish Kumar as saying.
The husband and wife who ran the clinic were arrested after the earlier raid, accused of carrying out illegal sex-determination tests and subsequent abortions.
Employees of the nursing home had told authorities the wells had been used to get rid of the aborted foetuses, the newspaper said.
About 100 leg, arm and rib bones of the foetuses believed to be aged between three and five months old were recovered along with blood-soaked clothes, the report said.
Girls in India are often considered a liability as parents have to put away large sums of money for dowries at the time of their marriage.
Centuries of tradition also demand that couples produce at least one male child to carry on the family name.
A study by British medical journal The Lancet said this year that India may have lost 10 million unborn girls in the past 20 years, but Indian experts have challenged the number, saying it likely closer to five million.
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 7:05 pm
mary kay says:
women’s rights? tell that to the 5 million female infants…
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 7:05 pm
Jersey McJones says:
I think, personally, and I mean this, the anti-choice crowd is scared to death of RU486 and especially the MAP (Plan B) because if these medications become mainstream and easily available, abortion, as an issue, will cease to exist.
1: The numbers of these “abortions” will become impossible to track (which, ironically, always worked in the anti-choice arguments, as there was no way to show what the numbers were prior to RvW because people kept quiet).
2: The alleged detrimental psychological effects will be negated (women won’t ever know if they were even ever pregnant or not).
3: The stigmatizing of abortion providers, pro-choice politicians, and patients will be gone (no target enemy/victim to unite the anti-choice constituency against).
I’m tellin’ ya’ - this will be the end of the issue of abortion.
Good riddance.
JMJ
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 8:51 pm
Lauren, lauren, lauren says:
Your reference doesn’t villify abortion, it villifies human rights. It’s a shame that these women have to undergo back-alley abortions that probably 1. aren’t safe and 2. are forced. This has nothign to do with choice mary kay
Comment posted August 14th, 2006 at 9:14 pm
Pansy Moss says:
Why do I bother?
Don’t. Less headache.
Comment posted August 15th, 2006 at 3:43 am
Lauren, lauren, lauren says:
On the Elliot institute.. why dont any of you ever come comment on my site lol..?:)
http://www.campusprogress.org/page/community/post_group/main/C3nk
I was thinking today, I would start adding links to my comments about non-fetal issues. I’d like to deal with children’s issues because those are important to me.
Saudi wahhabist police allow girls to burn inside school
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/1874471.stm
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