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Mifepristone is also known as RU-486, the abortion pill, medical abortion, or chemical abortion | == Mifepristone is also known as RU-486, the abortion pill, medical abortion, or chemical abortion == | ||
'''[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36592459/ Short-Term Adverse Outcomes After Mifepristone-Misoprostol Versus Procedural Induced Abortion : A Population-Based Propensity-Weighted Study]. Liu, N., & Ray, J. G. (2023). ''Annals of Internal Medicine'', ''176''(2). <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.7326/M22-2568</nowiki>'''<blockquote>'''Background:''' Prior studies comparing first-trimester pharmaceutical induced abortion (IA) with procedural IA were prone to selection bias, were underpowered to assess serious adverse events (SAEs), and did not account for confounding by indication. Starting in 2017, mifepristone-misoprostol was dispensed at no cost in outpatient pharmacies across Ontario, Canada. | |||
'''Objective:''' To compare short-term risk for adverse outcomes after early IA by mifepristone-misoprostol versus by procedural IA. | |||
'''Design:''' Population-based cohort study. | |||
'''Setting:''' Ontario, Canada. | |||
'''Patients:''' All women who had first-trimester IA. | |||
'''Measurements:''' A total of 39 856 women dispensed mifepristone-misoprostol as outpatients were compared with 65 176 women undergoing procedural IA at 14 weeks' gestation or earlier within nonhospital outpatient clinics (comparison 1). A total of 39 856 women prescribed mifepristone-misoprostol were compared with 8861 women undergoing ambulatory hospital-based procedural IA at an estimated 9 weeks' gestation or less (comparison 2). The primary composite outcome was any SAE within 42 days after IA, including severe maternal morbidity, end-organ damage, intensive care unit admission, or death. A coprimary broader outcome comprised any SAE, hemorrhage, retained products of conception, infection, or transfusion. Stabilized inverse probability of treatment weighting accounted for confounding between exposure groups. | |||
'''Results:''' Mean age at IA was about 29 years (SD, 7); 33% were primigravidae. Six percent resided in rural areas, and 25% resided in low-income neighborhoods. In comparison 1, SAEs occurred among 133 women after mifepristone-misoprostol IA (3.3 per 1000) versus 114 after procedural IA (1.8 per 1000) (relative risk [RR], 1.87 [95% CI, 1.44 to 2.43]; absolute risk difference [ARD], 1.5 per 1000 [CI, 0.9 to 2.2]). The respective rates of any adverse event were 28.9 versus 12.4 per 1000 (RR, 2.33 [CI, 2.11 to 2.57]; ARD, 16.5 per 1000 [CI, 14.5 to 18.4]). In comparison 2, SAEs occurred among 133 (3.4 per 1000) and 27 (3.3 per 1000) women, respectively (RR, 1.04 [CI, 0.61 to 1.78]). The respective rates of any adverse event were 31.2 versus 24.9 per 1000 (RR, 1.25 [CI, 1.04 to 1.51]). | |||
'''Limitation:''' A woman prescribed mifepristone-misoprostol may not have taken the medication, and the exact gestational age at IA was not always known. | |||
'''Conclusion:''' Although rare, short-term adverse events are more likely after mifepristone-misoprostol IA than procedural IA, especially for less serious adverse outcomes.</blockquote> | |||
'''[http://www.frcblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Australian-AERs_RU486_201105mulligan.pdf Mifepristone in South Australia] Mulligan E, Messenger H. Australian Family Physician. MAY 2011.''' | |||
: The study found 3.3% of the women who used RU-486 in the first trimester of pregnancy reported to an emergency room compared with 2.2% who used a surgical method and •5.7% of the women who used RU-486 had to be re-admitted to hospitals compared with 0.4% of surgical abortion patients. | |||
: | |||
'''[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38777160/ Medication and procedural abortions before 13 weeks gestation and risk of psychiatric disorders.] Steinberg, J. R., Laursen, T. M., Lidegaard, Ø., & Munk-Olsen, T. (2024).''American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology'', ''231''(4), 437.e1-437.e18. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1016/J.AJOG.2024.05.025</nowiki>'''<blockquote>'''Background:''' The proportion of abortions provided by medication in the United States and worldwide has increased greatly since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved mifepristone in 2000. While existing research has shown that abortion does not increase risk of mental health problems, no population-based study has examined specifically whether a procedural or medication abortion increases risk of mental health disorders. | |||
'''Objective:''' This study examined whether mental health disorders increased in the shorter and longer-term after a medication or procedural abortion. | |||
'''Study design:''' Using Danish population registers' data, we conducted a prospective cohort study in which we included 72,424 females born in Denmark between 1980 and 2006, who were ages 12 to 38 during the study period and had a first first-trimester abortion before 13 weeks gestation in 2000 to 2018. Females with no previous psychiatric diagnoses were followed from 1 year before their abortion until their first psychiatric diagnosis, December 31, 2018, emigration from Demark, or death, whichever came first. Risk of any first psychiatric disorder was defined as a recorded psychiatric diagnosis at an in- or out-patient facility from the 1 year after to more than 5 years after a medication or procedural abortion relative to the year beforehand. Results were adjusted for calendar year, age, gestational age, partner status, prior mental and physical health, childbirth history, childhood environment, and parental mental health history. | |||
'''Results:''' Females having medication (n=37,155) and procedural abortions (n=35,269) had the same risk of any first psychiatric diagnosis in the year after their abortion relative to the year before their abortion (medication abortion adjusted incidence rate ratio [MaIRR]=1.02, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.93-1.12; procedural abortion adjusted incidence rate ratio [PaIRR]=0.94, 95% CI: 0.86-1.02). Moreover, as more time from the abortion passed, the risk of a psychiatric diagnoses decreased relative to the year before their abortion for each abortion method (MaIRR 1-2 years after=0.89, 95% CI: 0.80-0.98; PaIRR 1-2 years after=0.81, 95% CI: 0.88-1.05; MaIRR 2-5 years after=0.77, 95% CI: 0.71-0.84; PaIRR 2-5 years after=0.72, 95% CI: 0.67-0.78; MaIRR 5+ years after=0.58, 95% CI: 0.53-0.63; PaIRR 5+ years after=0.54, 95% CI: 0.50-0.58). | |||
'''Conclusion:''' Because the risk of psychiatric diagnoses was the same in the year after relative to the year before a medication and procedural abortion and the risk did not increase as more time after the abortion increased, neither abortion method increased risk of mental health disorders in the shorter or longer-term.</blockquote> | |||
'''[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34778493/ A Longitudinal Cohort Study of Emergency Room Utilization Following Mifepristone Chemical and Surgical Abortions, 1999-2015.]''' '''Health Serv Res Manag Epidemiol. 2021 Nov 9;8:23333928211053965. doi: 10.1177/23333928211053965.''' <blockquote> | |||
'''Introduction:''' Existing research on postabortion emergency room visits is sparse and limited by methods which underestimate the incidence of adverse events following abortion. Postabortion emergency room (ER) use since Food and Drug Administration approval of chemical abortion in 2000 can identify trends in the relative morbidity burden of chemical versus surgical procedures. | |||
'''Objective:''' To complete the first longitudinal cohort study of postabortion emergency room use following chemical and surgical abortions. | |||
'''Methods:''' A population-based longitudinal cohort study of 423 000 confirmed induced abortions and 121,283 subsequent ER visits occurring within 30 days of the procedure, in the years 1999-2015, to Medicaid-eligible women over 13 years of age with at least one pregnancy outcome, in the 17 states which provided public funding for abortion. | |||
'''Results:''' ER visits are at greater risk to occur following a chemical rather than a surgical abortion: all ER visits (OR 1.22, CL 1.19-1.24); miscoded spontaneous (OR 1.88, CL 1.81-1.96); and abortion-related (OR 1.53, CL 1.49-1.58). ER visit rates per 1000 abortions grew faster for chemical abortions, and by 2015, chemical versus surgical rates were 354.8 versus 357.9 for all ER visits; 31.5 versus 8.6 for miscoded spontaneous abortion visits; and 51.7 versus 22.0 for abortion-related visits. Abortion-related visits as a percent of total visits are twice as high for chemical abortions, reaching 14.6% by 2015. Miscoded spontaneous abortion visits as a percent of total visits are nearly 4 times as high for chemical abortions, reaching 8.9% of total visits and 60.9% of abortion-related visits by 2015. | |||
'''Conclusion:''' The incidence and per-abortion rate of ER visits following any induced abortion are growing, but chemical abortion is consistently and progressively associated with more postabortion ER visit morbidity than surgical abortion. There is also a distinct trend of a growing number of women miscoded as receiving treatment for spontaneous abortion in the ER following a chemical abortion.</blockquote> | |||
'''[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35633832/ A Post Hoc Exploratory Analysis: Induced Abortion Complications Mistaken for Miscarriage in the Emergency Room are a Risk Factor for Hospitalization]. Studnicki J, Longbons T, Harrison DJ, Skop I, Cirucci C, Reardon DC, Craver C, Fisher JW, Tsulukidze M. Health Serv Res Manag Epidemiol. 2022 May 20;9:23333928221103107. doi: 10.1177/23333928221103107.''' <blockquote> | |||
'''Introduction:''' Previous research indicates that an increasing number of women who go to an emergency room for complications following an induced abortion are treated for a miscarriage, meaning their abortion is miscoded or concealed. | |||
'''Objective:''' To determine if the failure to identify a prior induced abortion during an ER visit is a risk factor for higher rates of subsequent hospitalization. | |||
'''Methods:''' Post hoc analysis of hospital admissions following an induced abortion and ER visit within 30 days: 4273 following surgical abortion and 408 following chemical abortion; abortion not miscoded versus miscoded or concealed at prior ER visit. | |||
'''Results:''' Chemical abortion patients whose abortions are misclassified as miscarriages during an ER visit subsequently experience on average 3.2 hospital admissions within 30 days. 86% of the patients ultimately have surgical removal of retained products of conception (RPOC). Chemical abortions are more likely than surgical abortions (OR 1.80, CL 1.38-2.35) to result in an RPOC admission, and chemical abortions concealed are more likely to result (OR 2.18, CL 1.65-2.88) in a subsequent RPOC admission than abortions without miscoding. Surgical abortions miscoded/concealed are similarly twice as likely to result in hospital admission than those without miscoding. | |||
'''Conclusion:''' Patient concealment and/or physician failure to identify a prior abortion during an ER visit is a significant risk factor for a subsequent hospital admission. Patients and ER personnel should be made aware of this risk.</blockquote> | |||
'''" Pain control in medical abortion", E Wiebe, Int'l J Gynecology & Obstetrics 74:275-280,2001''' | '''" Pain control in medical abortion", E Wiebe, Int'l J Gynecology & Obstetrics 74:275-280,2001''' | ||
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'''[http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc1001014 Fatal Clostridium sordellii Infections after Medical Abortions] N Engl J Med 2010; 363:1382-1383September 30, 2010''' | '''[http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc1001014 Fatal Clostridium sordellii Infections after Medical Abortions] N Engl J Med 2010; 363:1382-1383September 30, 2010''' | ||
:Clostridial toxic shock is a rare and largely fatal syndrome among reproductive-age women. Eight cases were reported after medical abortions using mifepristone and misoprostol between 2000 and 2009 bringing the risk of clostridial toxic shock to 0.58 per 100,000 medical abortions. | :Clostridial toxic shock is a rare and largely fatal syndrome among reproductive-age women. Eight cases were reported after medical abortions using mifepristone and misoprostol between 2000 and 2009 bringing the risk of clostridial toxic shock to 0.58 per 100,000 medical abortions. | ||
[http://www.lifenews.com/2014/12/03/doctor-saves-106-babies-after-the-abortion-has-already-started-wait-until-you-see-how/ Abortion Pill Reversal can be successful] | |||
: Article regarding a medical protocol for women who change their minds to stop the RU-486 induced abortion. | |||
'''" Pain control in medical abortion", E Wiebe, Int'l J Gynecology & Obstetrics 74:275-280,2001''' | |||
A Canadian study of abortion procedures using methotrexate and misoprostol reported that the mean pain Score was 6.2 on a scale from 1-10. Severe pain (scores of 9 or 10) was reported by 23.4% of the women. Women experiencing severe pain were more likely to have a lower maternal age, lower parity, higher anxiety and depression, and less satisfaction with the procedure. The authors reported that pain medication given before the onset of the procedure did not reduce the amount of severe pain. | |||
: | |||
[http://www.lifenews.com/2011/05/10/study-high-of-women-using-abortion-drug-hospitalized/ Additional information] |
Latest revision as of 13:36, 20 December 2024
Mifepristone is also known as RU-486, the abortion pill, medical abortion, or chemical abortion
Short-Term Adverse Outcomes After Mifepristone-Misoprostol Versus Procedural Induced Abortion : A Population-Based Propensity-Weighted Study. Liu, N., & Ray, J. G. (2023). Annals of Internal Medicine, 176(2). https://doi.org/10.7326/M22-2568
Background: Prior studies comparing first-trimester pharmaceutical induced abortion (IA) with procedural IA were prone to selection bias, were underpowered to assess serious adverse events (SAEs), and did not account for confounding by indication. Starting in 2017, mifepristone-misoprostol was dispensed at no cost in outpatient pharmacies across Ontario, Canada.
Objective: To compare short-term risk for adverse outcomes after early IA by mifepristone-misoprostol versus by procedural IA.
Design: Population-based cohort study.
Setting: Ontario, Canada.
Patients: All women who had first-trimester IA.
Measurements: A total of 39 856 women dispensed mifepristone-misoprostol as outpatients were compared with 65 176 women undergoing procedural IA at 14 weeks' gestation or earlier within nonhospital outpatient clinics (comparison 1). A total of 39 856 women prescribed mifepristone-misoprostol were compared with 8861 women undergoing ambulatory hospital-based procedural IA at an estimated 9 weeks' gestation or less (comparison 2). The primary composite outcome was any SAE within 42 days after IA, including severe maternal morbidity, end-organ damage, intensive care unit admission, or death. A coprimary broader outcome comprised any SAE, hemorrhage, retained products of conception, infection, or transfusion. Stabilized inverse probability of treatment weighting accounted for confounding between exposure groups.
Results: Mean age at IA was about 29 years (SD, 7); 33% were primigravidae. Six percent resided in rural areas, and 25% resided in low-income neighborhoods. In comparison 1, SAEs occurred among 133 women after mifepristone-misoprostol IA (3.3 per 1000) versus 114 after procedural IA (1.8 per 1000) (relative risk [RR], 1.87 [95% CI, 1.44 to 2.43]; absolute risk difference [ARD], 1.5 per 1000 [CI, 0.9 to 2.2]). The respective rates of any adverse event were 28.9 versus 12.4 per 1000 (RR, 2.33 [CI, 2.11 to 2.57]; ARD, 16.5 per 1000 [CI, 14.5 to 18.4]). In comparison 2, SAEs occurred among 133 (3.4 per 1000) and 27 (3.3 per 1000) women, respectively (RR, 1.04 [CI, 0.61 to 1.78]). The respective rates of any adverse event were 31.2 versus 24.9 per 1000 (RR, 1.25 [CI, 1.04 to 1.51]).
Limitation: A woman prescribed mifepristone-misoprostol may not have taken the medication, and the exact gestational age at IA was not always known.
Conclusion: Although rare, short-term adverse events are more likely after mifepristone-misoprostol IA than procedural IA, especially for less serious adverse outcomes.
Mifepristone in South Australia Mulligan E, Messenger H. Australian Family Physician. MAY 2011.
- The study found 3.3% of the women who used RU-486 in the first trimester of pregnancy reported to an emergency room compared with 2.2% who used a surgical method and •5.7% of the women who used RU-486 had to be re-admitted to hospitals compared with 0.4% of surgical abortion patients.
Medication and procedural abortions before 13 weeks gestation and risk of psychiatric disorders. Steinberg, J. R., Laursen, T. M., Lidegaard, Ø., & Munk-Olsen, T. (2024).American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 231(4), 437.e1-437.e18. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.AJOG.2024.05.025
Background: The proportion of abortions provided by medication in the United States and worldwide has increased greatly since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved mifepristone in 2000. While existing research has shown that abortion does not increase risk of mental health problems, no population-based study has examined specifically whether a procedural or medication abortion increases risk of mental health disorders.
Objective: This study examined whether mental health disorders increased in the shorter and longer-term after a medication or procedural abortion.
Study design: Using Danish population registers' data, we conducted a prospective cohort study in which we included 72,424 females born in Denmark between 1980 and 2006, who were ages 12 to 38 during the study period and had a first first-trimester abortion before 13 weeks gestation in 2000 to 2018. Females with no previous psychiatric diagnoses were followed from 1 year before their abortion until their first psychiatric diagnosis, December 31, 2018, emigration from Demark, or death, whichever came first. Risk of any first psychiatric disorder was defined as a recorded psychiatric diagnosis at an in- or out-patient facility from the 1 year after to more than 5 years after a medication or procedural abortion relative to the year beforehand. Results were adjusted for calendar year, age, gestational age, partner status, prior mental and physical health, childbirth history, childhood environment, and parental mental health history.
Results: Females having medication (n=37,155) and procedural abortions (n=35,269) had the same risk of any first psychiatric diagnosis in the year after their abortion relative to the year before their abortion (medication abortion adjusted incidence rate ratio [MaIRR]=1.02, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.93-1.12; procedural abortion adjusted incidence rate ratio [PaIRR]=0.94, 95% CI: 0.86-1.02). Moreover, as more time from the abortion passed, the risk of a psychiatric diagnoses decreased relative to the year before their abortion for each abortion method (MaIRR 1-2 years after=0.89, 95% CI: 0.80-0.98; PaIRR 1-2 years after=0.81, 95% CI: 0.88-1.05; MaIRR 2-5 years after=0.77, 95% CI: 0.71-0.84; PaIRR 2-5 years after=0.72, 95% CI: 0.67-0.78; MaIRR 5+ years after=0.58, 95% CI: 0.53-0.63; PaIRR 5+ years after=0.54, 95% CI: 0.50-0.58).
Conclusion: Because the risk of psychiatric diagnoses was the same in the year after relative to the year before a medication and procedural abortion and the risk did not increase as more time after the abortion increased, neither abortion method increased risk of mental health disorders in the shorter or longer-term.
A Longitudinal Cohort Study of Emergency Room Utilization Following Mifepristone Chemical and Surgical Abortions, 1999-2015. Health Serv Res Manag Epidemiol. 2021 Nov 9;8:23333928211053965. doi: 10.1177/23333928211053965.
Introduction: Existing research on postabortion emergency room visits is sparse and limited by methods which underestimate the incidence of adverse events following abortion. Postabortion emergency room (ER) use since Food and Drug Administration approval of chemical abortion in 2000 can identify trends in the relative morbidity burden of chemical versus surgical procedures.
Objective: To complete the first longitudinal cohort study of postabortion emergency room use following chemical and surgical abortions.
Methods: A population-based longitudinal cohort study of 423 000 confirmed induced abortions and 121,283 subsequent ER visits occurring within 30 days of the procedure, in the years 1999-2015, to Medicaid-eligible women over 13 years of age with at least one pregnancy outcome, in the 17 states which provided public funding for abortion.
Results: ER visits are at greater risk to occur following a chemical rather than a surgical abortion: all ER visits (OR 1.22, CL 1.19-1.24); miscoded spontaneous (OR 1.88, CL 1.81-1.96); and abortion-related (OR 1.53, CL 1.49-1.58). ER visit rates per 1000 abortions grew faster for chemical abortions, and by 2015, chemical versus surgical rates were 354.8 versus 357.9 for all ER visits; 31.5 versus 8.6 for miscoded spontaneous abortion visits; and 51.7 versus 22.0 for abortion-related visits. Abortion-related visits as a percent of total visits are twice as high for chemical abortions, reaching 14.6% by 2015. Miscoded spontaneous abortion visits as a percent of total visits are nearly 4 times as high for chemical abortions, reaching 8.9% of total visits and 60.9% of abortion-related visits by 2015.
Conclusion: The incidence and per-abortion rate of ER visits following any induced abortion are growing, but chemical abortion is consistently and progressively associated with more postabortion ER visit morbidity than surgical abortion. There is also a distinct trend of a growing number of women miscoded as receiving treatment for spontaneous abortion in the ER following a chemical abortion.
A Post Hoc Exploratory Analysis: Induced Abortion Complications Mistaken for Miscarriage in the Emergency Room are a Risk Factor for Hospitalization. Studnicki J, Longbons T, Harrison DJ, Skop I, Cirucci C, Reardon DC, Craver C, Fisher JW, Tsulukidze M. Health Serv Res Manag Epidemiol. 2022 May 20;9:23333928221103107. doi: 10.1177/23333928221103107.
Introduction: Previous research indicates that an increasing number of women who go to an emergency room for complications following an induced abortion are treated for a miscarriage, meaning their abortion is miscoded or concealed.
Objective: To determine if the failure to identify a prior induced abortion during an ER visit is a risk factor for higher rates of subsequent hospitalization.
Methods: Post hoc analysis of hospital admissions following an induced abortion and ER visit within 30 days: 4273 following surgical abortion and 408 following chemical abortion; abortion not miscoded versus miscoded or concealed at prior ER visit.
Results: Chemical abortion patients whose abortions are misclassified as miscarriages during an ER visit subsequently experience on average 3.2 hospital admissions within 30 days. 86% of the patients ultimately have surgical removal of retained products of conception (RPOC). Chemical abortions are more likely than surgical abortions (OR 1.80, CL 1.38-2.35) to result in an RPOC admission, and chemical abortions concealed are more likely to result (OR 2.18, CL 1.65-2.88) in a subsequent RPOC admission than abortions without miscoding. Surgical abortions miscoded/concealed are similarly twice as likely to result in hospital admission than those without miscoding.
Conclusion: Patient concealment and/or physician failure to identify a prior abortion during an ER visit is a significant risk factor for a subsequent hospital admission. Patients and ER personnel should be made aware of this risk.
" Pain control in medical abortion", E Wiebe, Int'l J Gynecology & Obstetrics 74:275-280,2001
- A Canadian study of abortion procedures using methotrexate and misoprostol reported that the mean pain
Score was 6.2 on a scale from 1-10. Severe pain (scores of 9 or 10) was reported by 23.4% of the women. Women experiencing severe pain were more likely to have a lower maternal age, lower parity, higher anxiety and depression, and less satisfaction with the procedure. The authors reported that pain medication given before the onset of the procedure did not reduce the amount of severe pain.
Mifepristone in South Australia Mulligan E, Messenger H. Australian Family Physician. MAY 2011.
- The study found 3.3% of the women who used RU-486 in the first trimester of pregnancy reported to an emergency room compared with 2.2% who used a surgical method and •5.7% of the women who used RU-486 had to be re-admitted to hospitals compared with 0.4% of surgical abortion patients.
Psychological distress symptoms in women undergoing medical vs. surgical termination of pregnancy. Lowenstein L, Deutcsh M, Gruberg R, Solt I, Yagil Y, Nevo O, et al. (2006), General Hospital Psychiatry, 28(1):43–47.
- Compared to women choosing surgical abortion, those choosing chemical abortion had higher obsessive-compulsive symptoms, higher levels of guilt, higher interpersonal sensitivity scores, more paranoid ideation, and more general psychiatric symptoms.
A comparison of medical and surgical methods of termination of pregnancy: Choice, psychological consequences, and satisfaction with care. Slade, P., Heke, S., Fletcher, J., & Stewart, P. (1998). British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 105, 1288-1295.
- Those who had a medical abortion rated it as more stressful and experienced more disruption in their lives. “One of the main differences between these two methods of termination is the consciousness and participation of the patient in the medical procedure in a process that involves blood, pain, and death.”
Patient preference in a randomized study comparing medical and surgical abortion at 10-13 weeks gestation. Ashok P.W., Hamoda, H., Flett, G. M. M., Kidd, A., Fitzmaurice, A., Templeton, A. (2005). Contraception, 71, 143-148.
- 46.8% of women undergoing a medical abortion experienced a significant decline in self-esteem 2-3 weeks following the abortion. This was a higher percentage than among those who had a surgical abortion (39.5%).
Comparing medical versus surgical termination of pregnancy at 13-20 weeks of gestation: a randomized controlled trial, Kelly, T., Suddes, J., Howel, D., Hewison, J., & Robson, S. (2010). BJOG, 117, 1512-20.
- Women who had chemical abortions had higher PTSD intrusion scores, such as nightmares, than women who had surgical abortions
Abortion Pill Reversal can be successful
- Article regarding a medical protocol for women who change their minds to stop the RU-486 induced abortion.
Fatal Clostridium sordellii Infections after Medical Abortions N Engl J Med 2010; 363:1382-1383September 30, 2010
- Clostridial toxic shock is a rare and largely fatal syndrome among reproductive-age women. Eight cases were reported after medical abortions using mifepristone and misoprostol between 2000 and 2009 bringing the risk of clostridial toxic shock to 0.58 per 100,000 medical abortions.
Abortion Pill Reversal can be successful
- Article regarding a medical protocol for women who change their minds to stop the RU-486 induced abortion.
" Pain control in medical abortion", E Wiebe, Int'l J Gynecology & Obstetrics 74:275-280,2001
A Canadian study of abortion procedures using methotrexate and misoprostol reported that the mean pain Score was 6.2 on a scale from 1-10. Severe pain (scores of 9 or 10) was reported by 23.4% of the women. Women experiencing severe pain were more likely to have a lower maternal age, lower parity, higher anxiety and depression, and less satisfaction with the procedure. The authors reported that pain medication given before the onset of the procedure did not reduce the amount of severe pain.