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Post-Abortion Trauma in Men Still Overlooked
Catherine Coyle, Ph.D.
[More than thirty] years have passed since the legalization of abortion in the United States. In those years, numerous studies have documented the potential negative effects of abortion on women. The effects of abortion on men however have been largely ignored by both the scientific community and American society.
The few published studies concerning men suggest that, like women, men may experience grief,1 anxiety, guilt, helplessness,2 and anger.3 The fact that men tend to repress their emotions may also make it more difficult for them to resolve their grief.4 Even men who support their partners’ abortion may experience ambivalent feelings such as relief along with anxiety, anguish, grief, and guilt.5 About half of the men interviewed by these authors reported that one year after the abortion occurred, they still had frequent (monthly) thoughts about it.6
A recent study by Lauzon et al. (2000) compared men and women involved in first-trimester abortions with a control group of men and women who had not experienced abortion. After the abortion, participants were given a follow-up questionnaire and “three weeks after the abortion, 41.7 percent of women and 30.9 percent of the men were still highly distressed.” The authors concluded that “being involved in a first-trimester abortion can be highly distressing for both women and men."7
The most comprehensive work pertaining to men and abortion was published by Shostak and McLouth in 1984. These authors surveyed 1,000 men in 30 abortion clinics across the United States and followed up with post-abortion interviews involving 75 of those men. The persistence of occasional thoughts about the fetus was evident among the majority of post-abortion men interviewed. Of those men surveyed, 11 percent stated that they were opposed to their partners’ decision to abort and were described as experiencing a very profound sense of personal loss.3
If Shostak and McLouth’s sample
is representative of males in the United States, we may extrapolate in
terms of current abortion statistics. Given that approximately 50
million abortions have been performed since its legalization in 1973,
there may be as many as 5 million men who have been negatively affected
by abortion.
This inference may be too conservative since it is based only on the
fact that 11 percent of men were opposed to abortion in the Shostak and
McLouth study and does not account for many other men who may not
experience or even be aware of negative effects until quite some time
after the abortion. As men are not acknowledged by society as having any
role in the abortion decision, they may be confused by the intensity of
their emotions following abortion and/or unlikely to seek the help they
need.
The effect of legalized abortion on children has been obvious with
nearly fifty million children losing their lives before being born. The
effects on women are well-documented and many clinicians are now aware
of the existence of Post Abortion Syndrome8 among women. The effects of
abortion on men continue to be overlooked although the limited research
strongly suggests that abortion may have detrimental effects on men.
Abortion may contribute to a host of problems among men such as anger,
helplessness, guilt, grief, relationship problems, sexual problems,
risk-taking behaviors (e.g. substance abuse), sleep disturbances (e.g.
nightmares), anniversary reactions, clinical depression, and confusion
about masculinity.
This is unfortunate for both the men involved and for society as a whole
as abortion has damaged the very fabric of our society.
As children, mothers, and fathers are devalued, so too is the family, the foundational structure of a civilized society.
It
does not seem too far-reaching to suggest that abortion has sickened
all of our culture. The symptoms seem obvious as men and women struggle
with unresolved grief, families break down, and even living children
wonder at the precariousness of their existence.
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About the author: Catherine Coyle, author of Men and Abortion: A
Path to Healing, earned her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology at the
University of Wisconsin. She is a registered nurse and holds a master's
degree in psychiatric nursing. Dr. Coyle is an associate of the
International Forgiveness Institute and continues to pursue research in
the areas of both forgiveness and post-abortive trauma among men.
This article is reprinted with permission from www.FatherhoodForever.org
Learn more: Visit the Thomas W. Strahan Memorial Library -- www.abortionrisks.org -- for a bibliography of additional studies on men and abortion.
Citations
1. B. Raphael, The Anatomy of Bereavement (New York: Basic Books, 1993).
2. R. A. Gordon & C. Kilpatrick, "A program of group counseling for
men who accompany women seeking legal abortions," Community Mental
Health Journal 13: 291-295 (1977).
3. A. Shostak & G. McLouth, Men and Abortion: Lessons, Losses and Love (New York: Praeger, 1984).
4. V.M. Rue, "His abortion experience," Ethics and Medics 21: 3-4 (1996).
5. A. Kero et. al., "The male partner involved in legal abortion," Human Reproduction 14(10): 2669-2675 (1999).
6. A. Kero & A. Lalos, "Reactions and reflections in men, 4 and 12
months post-abortion," Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and
Gynecology 25: 135-143 (2004).
7. P. Lauzon et. al., "Emotional distress among couples involved in
first-trimester induced abortions," Canadian Family Physician 46:
2033-2040 (2000).
8. A.C. Speckhard & V.M. Rue, "Postabortion syndrome: An emerging
public health concern," Journal of Social Issues 48(3):95-119 (1992).
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