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STUDY LINKS ABORTION AND PREEMIES. Abortions
increase the risk of low birth weight in future pregnancies by a factor
of three, and of premature birth by a factor of two, according to the
largest U.S. study of its kind. The study is hardly perfect; the data
is more than 40 years old and doesn't distinguish between medical
abortions and "spontaneous abortions," better known as miscarriages.
Yet the report, published today in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health (JECH),
shows one of the strongest links yet between miscarriage or abortion on
premature birth and low birth weight — major risk factors for infant
death or sickness.
What makes the report significant is the size and detail of data.
Some previous, smaller
studies on abortion and future birth weight have suffered because
researchers were unable to untangle the effects of abortion from, say,
the effects of being poor (which also happens to increase a woman's
odds of having an abortion).
But the researchers
behind the JECH study, which evaluated just over 45,000 single-child
live births from 1959 to 1966, were able to adjust for an impressive
array of confounding variables, including race, age, weight, height,
marital status, occupation, the number of prenatal visits, the number
of previous children, smoking and drinking habits, drug habits, infant
gender and both parents' education levels.
That kind of rigor makes the new findings particularly important. The
study not only found a link between abortion or miscarriage and low
birth weight, but it also found that the risk appears to increase with
every subsequent miscarriage or abortion.
The accruing risk, says co-author Tilahun Adera at Virginia Commonwealth University, suggests that termination of pregnancy is a true cause of low birth weight and preterm birth rather than a variable
associated with such conditions. "It's not just an association," he
says. "The risk of premature birth increases with the increasing number
of abortions.
"Women who had had one,
two or three prior abortions or miscarriages were three, five and nine
times more likely, respectively, to have a low-birth-weight child, the
data showed. Though it's still not clear why that's so, doctors
theorize that the cervix may be weakened by miscarriage or abortion,
increasing the risk of preterm birth later on. Or, it could be that
uterine adhesions or infections from the terminated pregnancy slow the
growth of the fetus in subsequent pregnancies."
Recent major studies from
Australia and Canada have also concluded that miscarriages and induced
abortions raise the odds of premature birth and low birth weight — but
only modestly. (Those studies were able to distinguish women who had
miscarried from women who had intentionally ended their pregnancies.)
Many other studies have
found no clear link at all. Perhaps that's because different study
populations, taken from all over the world, involve different risk
factors for premature birth; or it may be simply that the sample sizes
in some studies were too small to pick up relatively small differences
between women who had had abortions and those who had not.The big
question, however, is how well data from the 1960s really represents
American women today. Back in the '60s, induced abortions were illegal
in the U.S. It's possible that some women in the study had abortions
but denied it — even to their doctors — or claimed to have miscarried.
That makes the data harder to interpret. Illegal abortion techniques of
the day, moreover, were no doubt cruder than abortion procedures today,
and they may have caused more permanent damage to the reproductive
system.
Indeed, the public-health
implications of the JECH study may be more suitable for developing
countries, says Adera — places where abortion is still illegal, and
where prenatal care may be similar to what was offered in the U.S. half
a century ago.
Still, he says, all over the world, "Women need to be informed about these risks."
[18Dec2007, Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health (JECH); 18Dec, http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1695927,00.html, By Laura Blue, Time]
[ED. NOTE: Click here
to find a number of studies that show a link between abortion and
premature delivery. While the article above tends to discount the 12/07
report in the JECH, at least 50 studies have shown a significant link
between abortion and preterm birth. Women have the right to know the
possible consequences of legal abortion.]
PRIOR ABORTION INCREASES RISKS FOR LATER BABIES. Babies
born to women with a history of abortion are significantly more likely
to be born too early and too small, according to a study published in
the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. The likelihood of low
birth weight increases with each prior abortion from three to five to
nine times. Similarly, pre-term births occur up to three times more
often after three abortions. [Abortion Drastically Increases Risk of
Pre-Term and Low-Weight Births, LifeNews.com, 12-27-07,
http://www.lifenews.com/nat3546.html; 3Jan08, Abstinence Clearinghouse)
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