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Finnish Study: 20 Percent of Women Using Abortion Drug Face Medical Complications
Planned Parenthood says "Our monitoring shows that mifepristone medication abortion continues to be a safe abortion option."
The
distributor of Mifeprex (the trade name for RU 486) says that "Mifeprex
is 92-95% effective for safely ending early pregnancy."
But a new study from Finland says that 20% of the women using the abortion pill suffer at least one significant complication.
Nearly 4% reported two or more complications or "adverse events."
The record-based study, "Immediate Complications After Medical Compared
with Surgical Termination of Pregnancy," appeared in the October 2009
issue of the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.
A team of Finnish Researchers headed by Maarit Niinimi of the Oulu
University Hospital looked at all abortions, surgical and chemical,
performed up to 63 days after gestation, in Finland between January 1,
2000 and December 31, 2006.
To identify and tally the complications, researchers looked at all
abortion patient inpatient and outpatient visits occurring within 42
days after the abortion. A national health records system enables
researchers to track the medical outcomes with individual patients over
time.
Researchers found that 15.6 % percent of those
undergoing chemical abortions hemorrhaged, 1.7% encountered infection,
and 6.7% had incomplete abortions.
Less than a tenth of 1% of women aborting chemically reported the other
adverse events measured by the study – injury, thromboembolic disease
(e.g., pulmonary embolism), psychiatric morbidity (e.g., depression,
psychoses), or death. But it should be noted that any latent
psychological or physical consequences (such as impaired fertility)
might not be manifest at 42 days post abortion.
A few things are very much worth noting about the complication rates.
The rate of those having "incomplete abortions" and infections
increased as the length of gestation increased.
In the U.S., the FDA tried to limit abortions using RU 486 to 49 days
gestation. But the industry has been openly performing them up to 63
days gestation and sometimes even later. Most of those in the Finnish
study who had incomplete abortions went on to have some sort of what
the authors term "surgical (re)evacuation."
Cross referencing demographic data, the Finnish researchers found that
the risk of hemorrhage increased among aborting women using RU 486 who
were aged 20-24, having had a previous birth, from a lower
socio-economic class and living in a densely populated or rural area.
Risk factors associated with an incomplete abortion were the same, but
also included those having a previous abortion, single, or having an
advanced gestation.
In comparison to surgical abortion, the risk of hemorrhage with
chemical abortions with RU 486 was nearly eight times higher, while the
likelihood of an incomplete abortion was five times higher.
It was not that surgical abortion was safe, however.
About 5.5% of Finnish women having surgical abortions reported at least
one adverse event. The rate of hemorrhage was significantly lower
(2.1%), as was the rate of incomplete abortion (1.6%), but infection
rates were about the same (1.7%). As might be expected, injury rates
from surgical abortion were about 20 times higher than those found with
chemical abortions, though not high as an overall percentage of adverse
events (0.6%).
Surprising from these figures is that there were a substantial number
of surgical abortions that were somehow "incomplete," with a number of
women returning for "surgical (re)evacuations."
This is a much different picture of abortion than one encounters in the
United States, where the safety of abortion, chemical or surgical, is
regularly touted by the abortion industry and its defenders.
Risks are mentioned, sometimes at the bottom of the page in small print
(on the mifepristone web site), or are said to be "rare" (Planned
Parenthood), but the overall message of safety and convenience shines
through.
Though the authors of the Finnish study label both the chemical and
surgical methods of abortion "generally safe," it is clear that
complications are more common than many might have been led to believe,
and that contrary to expectations that the chemical method was safer
and easier, the data clearly show that "medical abortion results in an
increased incidence of adverse events."
The study comes from Finland and was published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
[November 11, 2009, Dr. Randy O'Bannon, www.LifeNews.com;
LifeNews.com Note: Randall O'Bannon, Ph.D., is the director of education and research for the National Right to Life Committee; OneNewsNow - 11/18/2009, http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=772426]
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