Supplement 2

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Supplement No.2 to Detrimental Effects of Induced Abortion: An Annotated Bibliography


Informed Consent

Abortion, Information and the Law: What Every Doctor Needs to Know, Issues in Law & Medicine 16(3):283-284, 2001

It has not been proved that pregnancy and delivery are more dangerous than abortion.

Long-Term Physical and Psychological Health Consequences of Induced Abortion: Review of the Evidence, JM Thorp et al, Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey 58(1):67-79, 2003

Informed consent before induced abortion should include information about the subsequent risk of preterm delivery and depression. Although it remains uncertain whether elective abortion increases subsequent breast cancer, it is clear that a decision to abort and delay having a baby results in a loss of protection with the net effect being an increased risk.


Pregnancy Reactions/Unwanted Pregnancy

The intendedness of pregnancy: a concept in transition, LV Klerman, Maternal and Child Health Journal 4(3):155-162, 2000

The terms, "intended", "unintended", "mistimed", "wanted", "unwanted" and "planned" are often used without significant attention being paid to their meaning or how they were derived from survey questions. There is a particular need to distinguish between terms that define attitudes and those that define behaviors.

Unintended pregnancy in a commercially insured population, DC Green et al, Maternal and Child Health Journal 6(3):181-187, 2002.

Women who reported that the partner did not want the pregnancy were 7.4 times more likely than women whose partner wanted the pregnancy to regard the pregnancy as unintended. Only 40% of the women with an unintended birth used birth control, and 64% of those used less effective methods such as condoms and diaphragms.


== Grief and Loss Following Abortion

Short-term grief after an elective abortion, GB Williams, J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nursing 30(2): 174-183, 2001.

A study of short-term grief responses using the Grief Experience Inventory compared women with an elective abortion within the past one month to 48 months to women who never had an elective abortion. Women with a history of elective abortion experienced grief in terms of loss of control, death anxiety, and dependency. There was an overall trend toward higher grief intensity in the abortion group. Presence of living children, perceived pressure to have the abortion, and the number of abortions appeared to affect the intensity of the grief response.


==Abortion-Related Guilt/Regret/Violation of Conscience or Belief

Women's Experiences of and Reactions to Antiabortion Counseling, C Cozzarelli et al, Basic and Applied Social Psychology 22(4): 265-275,2000.

Women who encountered abortion protestors when they were about to enter an abortion facility responded with considerable guilt and shame as well as anger. Women who were personally conflicted about abortion were more likely to experience guilt but not anger. Emotional responses of women also included being sad, afraid, confused , and wrong.



Dissociation

Attachment Style and Broken Attachments: Violence, Pregnancy, and Abortion, S Allanson and J Astbury, Australian Journal of Psychology 53(3): 146, 2001

Maladaptive interpersonal relationships, irrational repetition, and ambivalence may be linked to a person having developed contradictory models of the same aspect of reality. Multiple working models may direct attention and memory to exclude information about the self, about important others, and relationships to the point where primitive defenses of dissociation, splitting and self-deception may lead to a dissociated self. (Analysis within a traumatic stress-attachment framework where anxious and avoidant attachments were identified among women seeking a first trimester abortion.).


Self-Punishment (Masochism) or Punishment of Others (Sadism)

Unplanned pregnancies and abortion counseling.Some thoughts on unconscious motivations, B Loader, Psychodyn Couns. 1(3):363-376, 1995 (Abstract)

Many unwanted pregnancies result from unresolved conflicts carried over from the woman's early relationship with her mother. If the mother-child relationship failed to establish an internal representation of a caretaking function, the child will lack the capacity for self-care and may seek abortion as a deliberate mechanism for self-harm.


Short Term Depressive Reactions

Women's Experiences of a Reactions to Antiabortion Picketing, C Cozzarelli et al, Basic and Applied Social Psychology 22(4):265, 2000.

In a study of 442 women entering one of three abortion clinics in the Buffalo, New York area in 1993, 87% saw abortion demonstrators. At a two year follow- up, 24.5% of the women were clinically depressed. On average, women were significantly less depressed immediately after their abortion then they were two years later.


Long Term Depressive Reactions (5 years or more since abortion) see also Long Term Effects from Abortion

Depression associated with abortion and childbirth: A long-term analysis of the NLSY cohort, J Cougle et al, Medical Science Monitor 9: CR105-112, 2003.

A national sample of unintended pregnancies from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth found that, compared to women whose first pregnancy was delivered, women whose first pregnancy ended in abortion were 65% more likely to score in the "high-risk" range for clinical depression. Differences between the abortion and birth groups were higher for white women (79% higher) , married women (116% higher) , and women whose first marriage did not end in divorce (119% higher).


Psychiatric or Psychological Hospitalization or Consultation

Psychiatric admissions of low-income women following abortion and child birth, DC Reardon et al, Canadian Medical Association Journal 168:1253-1256, 2003.

A large scale study of low income California women who received medical assistance for abortion or childbirth in 1989, and had no psychiatric claims for one year prior to pregnancy resolution found that, within 90 days after pregnancy resolution, the abortion group had 160% more total in-patient mental health claims than the birth group. Percentages equaled 120%, 90%, 110%, 60%, and 50% for the first 180 days, one year, two years, three years, and four years respectively.

Across the four years, the abortion group had 70 % more in-patient mental health claims than the birth group. Percentages equaled 90%, 110%, and 200% for depressive psychosis, single episode, depressive psychosis, recurrent episode, and bipolar disorder, respectfully


Suicide/Attempted Suicide

Mental health may deteriorate as a direct effect of induced abortion, C Morgan et al, British Medical Journal 314:902, 1997

British researchers studied the frequency of admissions for attempted suicide by pregnancy event in women aged 15-49 in South Glamorgan Health Authority from 1991-1995. The overall frequency of admissions before induced abortion was 5.0 per 1000 and after induced abortion was 8.1 per 1000; The overall frequency of admissions before delivery was 2.9 per 1000 and after delivery was 1.9 per 1000. The authors concluded that, "the increased risk of suicide after an induced abortion may be a consequence of the procedure itself (and) data suggest that a deterioration in mental health may be a consequential side effect of induced abortion."


Repeat Abortion

Repeated requests for termination of pregnancy. Some socio-cultural and psychological aspects, B Mattauer et al, Contracept Fertil Sex (Paris) 12(4) 573-580,1984 (English Abstract)

A French study found that women with defective parental images had three times the risk of repeat abortion. Previous difficulties of pregnancy or delivery were associated with a higher risk of repeat abortion. Religious practice was associated with a reduced risk of repeat abortion.

Repeat abortion: a qualitative study, M Tornbom, A Moller, J. Psychosom Obstet Gynaecol 20(1):21-30, 1999

In-depth interviews of Swedish women seeking a repeat abortion found that most of the women seemed to have a psychological vulnerability with many current and previous problems, as well as problems regarding sexuality. The authors concluded that the main reason for an unplanned pregnancy is not a lack of information or even a lack of knowledge, but rather a failure to integrate the knowledge with situational, intrapsychic and social factors.


Substance Abuse and Induced Abortion

History of induced abortion in relation to substance abuse during subsequent pregnancies carried to term, PK Coleman et al, Am J Obstet Gynecol 187: 1673-1678, 2002.

A nationally representative sample of women using data from the National Pregnancy and Health Survey found that, compared to women who had given birth, women who had had an induced abortion were significantly more likely to use marijuana (OR 10.29,95%CI, 3.47-30.56) , various illicit drugs (OR 5.60, 95%CI, 2.39-13.10) , and alcohol (OR 2.22,95%CI, 1.31-3.76) during their next pregnancy. An average of 5 years had elapsed since a prior abortion; an average of 3.42 years had elapsed since a prior birth.


Smoking

Nicotine Dependence and Major Depression, N Breslau et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry 50:31-35, 1993

A history of major depression increased the risk for progression to nicotine dependence or more severe levels of dependence (OR 2.06,95%CI, 1.21-3.49). Persons with a history of nicotine dependence had a higher rate of first instance major depression during a 14 month follow-up period than persons with no history of nicotine dependence (7.5% v. 3.2% ; (OR 2.45,95%CI, 1.17-5.15). see also, Smoking and Major Depression, KS Kendler et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry 50:36-43, 1993 (average levels of cigarette consumption were strongly related with the lifetime prevalence rate for major depression.)


Abortion and Race or Poverty

Underreporting Sensitive Behaviors: The Case of Young Women's Willingness to Report Abortion, LB Smith et al, Health Psychology 18(1):37-43, 1999.

White and Asian-American young women aged 14-21 were more likely to be honest about having had an abortion than African-American and Latina participants.


Abortion and Religion

Repeated requests for termination of pregnancy.Some sociocultural and psychological aspects, B Mattauer et al, Contracept Fertil Sex (Paris) 12(4): 573-580, 1984 (English Abstract).

A French study found that religious practice was associated with a reduced risk of repeat abortion.


Abortion and Sexual Promiscuity/ Dysfunction

National Study of Family Growth-1995, Cycle V, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health Statistics, 1997

A national U.S. study of ever-pregnant women over age 35 found that women with no history of abortion had fewer sex partners before marriage (3.4 v. 9.2), and fewer lifetime sex partners (4.4 v. 12.7) compared to women with a history of abortion. Excluding women who had no sex partners before marriage, women with two or more abortions were likely to have more sex partners after marriage, (5.0), compared to women with a single abortion (2.0), or women with no history of abortion (2.0).

Forbidden Grief.The Unspoken Pain of Abortion, Theresa Burke and David Reardon, Springfield, IL:Acorn Books, 2002.

In an Elliot Institute survey of 260 women who were involved in faith-based postabortion counseling or advocacy groups, 42.7% said they became promiscuous within one month following their abortion; 51.6% said they became promiscuous within 6 months following their abortion; 46.6% said they developed an aversion to sex or became sexually unresponsive within one month, and 38.5% said they developed an aversion to sex or became sexually unresponsive within 6 months following their abortion.

Psychosocial Sequelae of Therapeutic Abortion in Young Unmarried Women, Judith Wallerstein et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry 27:828, 1972.

In-depth interviews of 22 women under 22 years of age who had an abortion At a Planned Parenthood facility in northern California in 1969-1970 at 5-7 months postabortion, 9 reported a newly begun promiscuous pattern in relationships with men following their abortion.

Physical and Psychological Injury in Women Following Abortion: Akron Pregnancy Services Survey, L Gsellman, Association for Interdisciplinary Research in Values and Social Change Newsletter 5(4) 1-8, 1993.

In a self-reported questionnaire survey of 344 postabortion women with a mean age of approximately 18 years at the time of their abortion and who were receiving general pregnancy related services (including 28% who had presented for post abortion counseling) , 9% of the women reported sexual promiscuity, 14% reported frigidity, and 23% reported a desire to get pregnant again as postabortion psychological complaints.

Psycho-Social Stress Following Abortion, Anne Speckhard, Kansas City: Sheed & Ward, 1987.

A study of 30 women who reported long term stress from abortion, 31% reported sexual promiscuity, 35% reported feelings of sexual anxiety, 35% reported a deter- ioration of their sexual relationship, and 69% reported feelings of sexual inhibition.

Health issues associated with increasing "crack" use among female sex workers, in London, H Ward et al, Sex Transm Infect 76(4):292,

Thirty-four percent of female sex workers reported using "crack" cocaine in 1995- 1996. Crack cocaine use was associated with abortion and hepatitis C infection.

What have we learned from adolescent prostitutes in the Caribbean that adult prostitutes did not tell us?, M Alegria et al, Int Conf AIDS, June, 1993; 9(1)89 (Abstract No. WS-CO8-2).

Prostitution for adolescents begins with family or academic problems leading to early sexual experience with boyfriend followed by pregnancy and abortion which leads to economic/emotional despair followed by prostitution and then drug use.

HIV risk relevant behaviors of Japanese adolescents, T Munkata and K Fujisawa, Int Conf AIDS 11(1) 385, July, 1996 (Abstract No. Tu.D.27012)

A mail survey to 10,000 Japanese adolescents age 13-24 in 1995 found that casual sex experiences were significantly influenced by self- or partners' abortion experience. Casual sex included having "first time" sex where partners were "sexually excited without love", "curiosity", "can't say No", or "nothing in particular".

Pregnancy outcome after ecstasy use; 43 cases followed by the Teratology Information Service of the National Institute for Public Health and Environment, MM van-Tonninger-van Driel et al, Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd 2;143(1): 27-31, 1999 (English Abstract).

A Dutch study of 43 women who used ecstacy during pregnancy reported that pregnancies were often unplanned and previous pregnancies had often been terminated. Besides ecstacy, mothers frequently also used other substances potentially harmful to the pregnancy and child.

Repeat Abortion: Blaming the Victims, B Howe et al, Am J Public Health 69(12):70, 1979.

Women who repeated abortion were found to be more sexually active compared to women with first abortions even though they used contraception more than women with one abortion.

Repeat Abortion: Is It a Problem?, C Berger et al, Family Planning Perspectives 16(2): 70, 1984.

A Canadian study found that women who repeated abortion had more frequent itercourse, less satisfying relations with their partner, had more difficulty sleeping, and were less likely to live with their partner compared to women with a single abortion.


HIV/AIDS

Post-abortion endometritis-myometritis and HIV infection, P Okong et al, Int'l J. STD &AIDS 13:729-732, 2002.

A 1997 study of women in an urban hospital in Kampala, Uganda found that HIV-1 seroprevalence was 32.7%-36.5% among post-abortion women compared to 14.6% among antenatal women in the same hospital.


Hepatitis

Hepatitis C virus, hepatitis B virus and human immune infection in pregnant women in North-East Italy: a case-control study, V Baldo et al, Eur J Epidemiol 16(1):87-91, 2000

A history of a previous abortion significantly increased the likelihood of HCV infection in pregnant women (OR 2.8,95%CI , 1.4-5.5).


Hypertension (High Blood Pressure)/Preeclampsia

Pregnancy-Related Mortality from Preeclampsia and Eclampsia, AP MacKay et al, Obstet Gynecol 97 (4): 533, 2001.

Based upon data from the Centers for Disease Control for 1979-1992, the mortality ratio (deaths from preeclampsia or eclampsia at 20 weeks or more gestational age per 100,000 births ) for U.S. women with a first live birth was 1.4, for women with a second live birth was 0.7, for women with a third live birth was 0.7, for women with a fourth live birth was 0.9, and for women with a fifth live birth or higher was 1.7. Women who gave birth at 28 weeks or less had a mortality ratio of 12.5 compared to women who gave birth at 29-32 gestational weeks (11.2) , or who gave birth at 33-36 gestational weeks (3.3), or who gave birth at 37 gestational weeks or more (0.5). Mortality ratios were higher for black women compared to white women, and were higher for older women compared to younger women.

History of abortion, preterm, term birth, and risk of preeclampsia: A population based study, Xu Xiong et al, Am J Obstet Gynecol 187:1013, 2002.

A large population-based study of Canadian women who delivered in 49 hospitals in Northern and Central Alberta between 1993 and 1999 found no significant difference in the incidence of preeclampsia among women with a previous abortion (2.6%) as compared to women without previous abortion (2.9%); Adjusted Odds Ratio 0.89 (0.78-1.01; P=0.05). The adjusted odds ratio of women with one, two, three, and four or more previous term pregnancies were 0.32 (95%CI, 0.28-0.36) , 0.27 (95%CI, 0.22-0.34), 0.22 (95%CI, 0.15-0.33), and 0.21 (95%CI, 0.12-0.35) respectively. The researchers also found that the protective effect from preeclampsia was not as great where women had previous preterm births compared to previous term births. It was concluded that a history of a term pregnancy i.e. 37 weeks or more, confers a substantial protection against preeclampsia in the subsequent pregnancy.

Risk Factors for Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension in Women at High-Risk for the Condition, F Parazzini et al, Epidemiology 7:306-308, 1996.

A study of 765 Italian women enrolled in a study of aspirin in pregnancy found that a total of 132 developed pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) during the study. The women who developed PIH were then compared to those who did not develop PIH. Compared to nulliparous women (1.0), women at parity one had a significant protective effect (OR 0.7, 95%CI, 0.4-1.0), while women at parity two had a further protective effect (OR 0.5, 95%CI, 0.3-0.9). Compared to women with no induced abortions (1.0), women with one or more induced abortions had no significant effect (OR 1.2, 95%CI, 0.6-2.5) on the incidence of PIH.

Abortion, changed paternity, and risk of preeclampsia in nulliparous women, AF Saftlas et al, Am J Epidemiology 157(12): 1108-1114, 2003.

In a U.S. Calcium for Prevention Trial during 1992-1995 researchers examined whether or not nulliparous women with a prior abortion who changed partners lost the protective effect of the prior pregnancy. Compared to women without a history of abortion, women with a history of abortion who conceived again with the same partner had a reduced risk of preeclampsia (OR 0.54,95% CI, 0.31-0.97). In contrast, women with an abortion history who conceived with a new partner had the same risk of preeclampsia as women without a history of abortion (OR 1.03,95%CI, 0.72-1.47). Women who had a prior induced abortion were more likely to conceive again with a new partner (59%) compared to women with a prior spontaneous loss (41%).

Change in paternity: a risk factor for preeclampsia in multiparous women?, P Tubbergen et al, J Reprod Immunol. 45(1):81-88, 1999.

A Dutch study found that multiparous patients with diastolic blood pressure of 100 mmHg or greater had a significantly higher risk for hypertension with a new partner compared to a control group with normotensive pregnancies without hypertension (OR 8.6,95%CI, 3.1-23.5).

Preeclampsia in the parous woman: who is at risk?, D Mostello et al, Am J Obstet Gynecol 187(2): 425-429, 2002.

A Missouri study to identify risk factors for preeclampsia in second pregnancies found that the same paternity for the first and second pregnancies was protective against preeclampsia in the second pregnancy.

Preeclampsia Associated with Chronic Hypertension Among African-American and White Women, AR Samadi et al, Ethn Dis. 11:192-200, 2001.

Preeclampsia was more than eleven times more likely among women with chronic hypertension compared to normotensive women for both African- American women (OR 12.4,95%CI, 10.2-15.2) and white women (OR 11.3, 95%CI, 9.7-13.2).

The Effect of Cigarette Smoking on the Risk of Preeclampsia and Gestational Hypertension, S Marcoux et al, Am J Epidemiology 130(5):950-957, 1989.

A case-control study of primiparous women without a history of high blood pressure who gave birth in Quebec City or Montreal Hospitals between 1984- 1986 , found that women who were smokers at the onset of pregnancy had a reduced risk of preeclampsia (OR 0.51,95%CI, 0.34-0.77), and a reduced risk of gestational hypertension (OR 0.78,95%CI, 0.54-1.12) compared to women who never smoked.


Ectopic Pregnancy

. Risk factors for ectopic pregnancy: a comprehensive analysis based on a large case-control, population-based study in France. J Bouyer et al, Am J Epidemiol 157(3): 185-194, 2003.

Prior medical induced abortion was associated with an increased of ectopic pregnancy (OR 2.8, 95%CI, 1.1-7.2). No significant association was observed for surgical abortion (OR 1.1,95% CI, 0.8-1.6). Other main risk factors were infectious history, previous pelvic infectious disease and smoking. (Ed. Note: The unadjusted association between ectopic pregnancy and prior surgical abortion was statistically significant (OR 1.4,95%CI, 1.1-1.8). However, by adjusting for pelvic infectious disease and smoking, the actual risk of surgical abortion would be understated.)


==Placenta Previa/Abruptio Placentae/Retained Placenta

Induced abortion and placenta complications in the subsequent pregnancy, W Zhou et al, Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand 80(12): 1115-1120, 2001.

A Danish record linkage study from 1980-1982 found that there was an increased risk for retained placenta (OR 1.17,95%CI, 1.02-1.35) for women with one previous induced abortion , and an increased risk for retained placenta for women with two or more previous induced abortions (OR 1.68, 95%CI, 1.23-2.30) compared with a control cohort with similar gravidity who did not terminate a pregnancy with an induced abortion. No significant association with placenta previa was found.


Subsequent Miscarriage/Premature Birth or Low Birth Weight

Induced Abortion and Risk of Later Premature Births, B Rooney and BC Calhoun, Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons 8(2):46-49, 2003.

This study summarizes 49 studies which have demonstrated a statistically significant risk in premature births among women with prior induced abortions.


Intraamniotic Infection/Intrapartum Infection/ Premature Rupture of Membranes/Prolonged Third Stage of Labor

Prolonged Third Stage of Labor: Morbidity and Risk Factors, C Combs and RK Laros, Obstet Gynecol 77:863, 1991

A study of 12, 979 singleton vaginal deliveries over an 11 year period at the University of California, San Francisco using logistic regression analysis, fund that nulliparous women were more likely to have a prolonged third stage of labor compared to parous women (OR 1.47, 95%CI, 1.15-1.89). Women with any previous abortions were significantly more likely to have a prolonged third stage of labor compared to women with no previous abortions. (OR 1.32, 95%CI,1.06-1.66).


Protective Effect of Early Childbirth/Breastfeeding

National Survey of Family Growth-1995, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Nat'l Center for Health Statistics, 1997.

In a national sample of ever-pregnant U.S. women age 35 or more, 14.9% of the women with a history of abortion never had a live birth.


Cervical Cancer

Determinants of cervical human papillomavirus infection:differences between high and low onocogenic risk types, PK Chang et al, J Infect Dis 185(1):28, 2002.

A survey of Hong Kong women who participated in cervical cancer screening found that the overall prevalence of HPV was 7.3%. Previous induced abortion was an 87% statistically significant increased risk for HPV for women at high risk for HPV, a 51% statistically significant increased risk for women with any HPV, and a 97% statistically significant increased risk for women with unknown risk for HPV. Other risk factors for HPV included lifetime number of sexual partners, smoking, and having smokers in the family.




Ovarian Cancer

Factors related to inflammation of the ovarian epithelium and the risk of ovarian cancer, RB Ness et al, Epidemiology 11(2):111, 2000.

A population based case-control study by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found that factors that suppress ovulation such as gravidity, breast feeding and oral contraception reduced the risk of ovarian cancer.

Univariate and Multivariate analysis of risk factors for ovarian cancer. case- control study, Mexico City, A Bernal et al, Arch Med Res. 26(3):245, 1995 (Abstract).

Ovarian cancer risk desreased as parity increased. An elevated risk for ovarian cancer was associated with an increased number of abortions with an increased relative risk for women with four fetal losses (OR 3.66,95%CI, 1.02-13.45). Logistic regression analysis found that the number of abortions and high estimated number of ovulatory cycles increased the risk of ovarian cancer.

Menstrual and reproductive factors in relation to ovarian cancer risk, L Titus- Ernstoff et al, Br J Cancer 84(5): 714-721, 2001.

A population based case-control study of ovarian cancer risk among Massachusetts and New Hampshire women using regression analysis found that ovarian cancer risk was reduced among parous women relative to nulli- parous women (OR 0.4,95%CI, 0.3-0.6). Among parous women, higher parity, increased age at first birth, time since last birth and breast feeding were associated with reduced risk. Among women who reported abortion, there was a non-significant increase in risk compared to women with no abortion history (OR 1.1, 95%CI ,0.7-1.6). Among women who reported miscarriage, there was no significant increase in risk compared to women with no history of mis- carriage (OR 1.0, 95%CI, 0.7-1.3).

Risk Factors for Invasive Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: Results from a Swedish Case-Control Study, T Riman et al, Am J Epidemiology 156:363-373, 2002.

Compared to nulliparous women, the risk of ovarian cancer was reduced for women of parity one (OR 0.61,95%CI, 0.46-0.81) , parity two (OR 0.55, 95% CI, 0.43-0.70) , parity three (OR 0.44, 95%CI, 0.33-0.58), parity four (OR 0.35 95% CI, 0.23-0.53) and parity five or more (OR 0.32,95%CI, 0.18-0.56). Compared to women reporting no spontaneous abortion, women reporting one spontaneous or induced abortion had a reduced risk of ovarian cancer (OR 0.76 95%CI, 0.59-0.98), and women reporting two or more spontaneous or induced abortions had a non-significant reduced risk of ovarian cancer (OR 0.70,95% CI, 0.44- 1.12).


Endometrial Cancer

Childbearing and mortality from cancer of the corpus uteri, M-L Lochen and E Lund, Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand 76:373-377, 1997.

A large cohort of Norwegian married women aged 45-74 years at the time of the 1970 census compared the risk of death from cancer of the corpus uteri and found that the age-adjusted risk reduction in mortality was 9.2% (95% CI, .0) for each child.

Reproductive Factors and Risk of Endometrial Cancer, CP McPherson et al, Am J Epidemiology 143 (12): 1195, 1996.

A cohort study of 24,848 postmenopausal Iowa women age 55-69 who were cancer free at baseline in 1986 and without a hysterectomy were followed for 5 years. During the five years, 167 endometrial cancer cases were documented. The mean gravidity of cases (2.6) was significantly lower than non-cases (3.5). A history of ever having had an induced abortion compared to never having had an induced abortion significantly increased the risk of endometrial cancer (RR 2.5,95%CI, 1.1-5.7). Among non-cases of endometrial cancer among women who had a previous abortion, 48.3% went on to have their last pregnancy end in a live birth compared to only 16.7% of the cases of endometrial cancer among women with a previous abortion. The authors concluded that the findings supported the "unopposed" estrogen hypothesis of endometrial cancer.

Risk Factors among young women with endometrial cancer: A Danish case- control study, M Parslov et al, Am J Obstet Gynecol 182:23, 2000.

This study included all Danish women less than 50 years old who had endometrial cancer during 1987-1994. A reduced risk was found for both parity greater than one (0.3) as well as one or more induced abortions (0.5). The authors calculated the protective impacts of various exposures compared to a situation without the particular exposure. These were: oral contraceptive use for one year or more (-45%), 2 term pregnancies (-88%), age 30 or more when giving birth for the first time (-38%), and a history of incomplete pregnancy (-16%).


Other Cancers

Birth characteristics, maternal reproductive history, hormone use during pregnancy, and risk of childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia by immunophenotype (United States), XO Shu et al, Cancer Causes and Control 13:15-25, 2002.

A case-control study of 1842 cases of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) compared to individually matched controls found that induced abortion by the childs' mother prior to the index pregnancy was a significantly higher risk factor for ALL in children compared to children of women who never had an induced abortion (OR 1.2,95%CI, 1.0-1.4). The risk for T-cell ALL during childhood where mothers reported having had an induced abortion



Differential Psychosocial Impact on Adolescents

Mental health may deteriorate as a direct effect of induced abortion, C Morgan et al, British Medical Journal 314:902, 1997.

The frequency of admission per 1000 population for attempted suicide by pregnancy event in women aged 15-19 in South Glamorgan Health Authority from 1991-1995 was 3.6 per 1000 before induced abortion and 10.8 per 1000 after induced abortion compared to 14.0 per 1000 before delivery and 2.6 per 1000 after delivery.

Psychiatric admissions of low income women following abortion and child- birth, DC Reardon et al, Canadian Medical Association Journal 168(10); 1253 2003.

The frequency of psychiatric admission rates for women age 13-19 for a 4 year period following their pregnancy outcome was 915.4 per 100,000 following abortion compared to 517 per 100,000 following delivery (OR 1.8, 95%CI, 1.1-2.9).

Differential Physical Complications of Adolescent Abortion

Pelvic inflammatory disease in adolescents, V Igra, AIDS Patient Care STDS 12(2): 109-124, 1998 (Abstract).

One in five cases of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) occurs among younger women less than 19 years of age. The risk of developing PID for a 15 year old sexually active girl is estimated to be 10 times that of a 24 year old woman. The higher risk of PID for younger women has been attributed to their greater biologic vulnerability and their behavioral and cognitive risk factors.


Adolescent Breast Cancer Risk

Adolescent Reproductive Events and Subsequent Breast Cancer Risk, PM Marcus et al, American Journal Public Health 89(8):1244, 1999.

Among parous premenopausal women who were breast-feeding before 20 years of age compared to no history of breast-feeding , there was a substantial risk reduction for breast cancer (OR 0.2, 95%CI, 0.1-0.6).



Thomas W. Strahan August 27, 2003