Replacement Pregnancies/Rapid Repeat Pregnancies After Abortion

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Thomas W. Strahan Memorial Library
Index
Standard of Care for Abortion
Abortion Decision-Making
Psychological Effects of Abortion
Social Effects and Implications
Physical Effects of Abortion
Abortion and Maternal Mortality
Adolescents and Abortion
Definition of Terms
Women's Health After Abortion
Material Yet to be Cataloged
Strahan Summary Articles


Sub-Index
Psychological Effects
Validity of Studies
Reviews
Risk Factors
PTSD
Grief and Loss
Guilt
Ambivalence or Inner Conflict
Anxiety
Intrusion / Avoidance / Nightmares
Denial
Dissociation
Narcissism
Self-Image
Self Punishment
Depression
Psychiatric Treatment
Self-Destructive Behavior
Substance Abuse
Long-Terms Effects of Abortion
Replacement Pregnancies
Sterilization
Impact of Abortion On Others
Violence
Rape, Incest, Sexual Assault
After Late Term Abortion

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"Adolescent Mourning Reactions to Infant and Fetal Loss," NH Horowitz, Social Casework 59:551, 1978.

Replacement pregnancies may follow adolescent abortion.


"Post-Abortion Perceptions: A Comparison of Self-Identified Distressed and Non- Distressed Populations," GK Congleton and GC Calhoun, The Int'l Journal of Social Psychiatry39(4): 255, 1993.

Women experiencing postabortion stress were more likely to report a desire to replace the fetus, report depression around the anniversary date or due date, and immediately experience feelings of loss compared to women reporting relieving/neutral postabortion experiences.


"Post-Abortion Trauma; 9 Steps to Recovery," Jeanette Vought (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1991)

53% of women in a religiously-based postabortion recovery group stated they desired to get pregnant again to compensate for the loss.


"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): 108, Sept/Oct, 1993

In a questionnaire survey of post-abortion women who were obtaining a variety of services at a pregnancy services center between 1988-93, 23% stated they desired to get pregnant again as a psychological reaction to abortion.


"Selection bias in a study on how women experienced induced abortion," H Soderberg et al, Eur J Obstet & Gynecol 77:67, 1998.

Swedish researchers at Lund University calculated that of approximately 33,000 induced abortions in Sweden each year, that about 6000 of these women will become pregnant again within 12 months, with half of them carrying to term, and the other half undergoing another induced abortion. (Non-participants in the follow-up study seemed to have a sense of guilt that they did not wish to discuss. These non-participants were significantly more likely to conceive again within 12 months and carry to term compared to study participants.)


"Conception rates after abortion with methotrexate and misoprostol," MD Creinin, Int'l J Gynaecol Obstet 65: 183-188, 1999.

25% of women who had abortions using methotrexate and misoprostol became pregnant again within the next 12 months. The vast majority of these pregnancies resulted in another induced abortion.


"Contraception and Repeat Abortion: An Epidemiological Investigation," MJ Shephard and MB Bracken, J Biosocial Science 11:289, 1979.

In a Connecticut study of abortion and contraceptive practice, it was found that 42% of women repeating abortion had had an abortion within the previous year.


"Repeat Pregnancies Among Metropolitan Area Teenagers, 1971-1979," MA Koenig and M Zelnik, Family Planning Perspectives 14(6):341, Nov/Dec 1982.

Among metropolitan teenagers age 15-19 whose first premarital pregnancy ended in abortion, 27% had a second premarital pregnancy within 12 months, 49.8% within 18 months and 74.9% within 24 months postabortion.


"Rapid Repeat Pregnancy and Experiences of Interpersonal Violence Among Low- Income Adolescents," M Jacoby et al, Am J Prev Med 16(4):318-321, 1999.

A Michigan study of low income women aged 13-21 found that within 12 months of a prior pregnancy outcome (delivery, spontaneous abortion, elective abortion), 43.6% of the women were again pregnant within 12 months, and by 18 months 63.2% had experienced at least one additional pregnancy. Women whose pregnancies ended in spontaneous or elective abortion were more likely to experience rapid repeat pregnancy than women who carried to term.