Subject: Fixing the Weak Spots in the Texas Abortion Ban

Elliot Institute News
June 30, 2022
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Abortion Linked to More Deaths than Coffee
 
Recent mainstream media headlines trumpeted the findings of a single new study revealing that adults who drank moderate amounts of coffee were 30% less likely to die during the period studied than those who didn’t drink coffee. But where are the headlines about the 11 studies showing that abortion is linked to a 50% increased risk of a woman’s premature death?

This is just the latest example of mainstream media’s selective bias, especially when it comes to killing stories that expose the dangers of unwanted, unsafe, and unnecessary abortions.

Why are mortality rates associated with coffee drinking more newsworthy than mortality rates associated with abortion?

In 2018, a peer reviewed systematic analysis showed that literally every study (11 in total) examining death certificates linked to reproductive health records has shown elevated risks of death among women following abortion.  A disproportionate number of these excess deaths are due to suicide.  Yet this important fact has never been reported by the New York Times or other major media outlets.

For example, in 1997 the Finnish government’s National Research and Development Centre for Welfare and Health’s first record linkage study of this type found that women who had abortions were 3.5 times more likely to die in the subsequent year compared to women who gave birth, and 2.5 times more likely to die compared to women who had not been pregnant.  

Put another way, these data suggest that there are 740 excess deaths among every million women who have had abortions.

Ten similar studies, examining larger populations in Finland, Denmark, and California, found similar results.  These studies also showed that the elevated risk of death is observable within 18o days of the abortion and remains higher for at least six years. There is also a dose effect, with each exposure to abortion increasing the risk of premature death by about 50 percent, which is strong evidence of a causal connection.

Aren’t these facts as interesting as the findings of a study of the associations between coffee-drinking and all-cause mortality rates?

Unfortunately, you’ll never hear the real science regarding abortion risks from the mainstream media outlets. 

Nor will you be told of the studies showing that 64% of women with a history of abortion report feeling pressured into unwanted abortions, contrary to their own maternal desires and moral beliefs.  Notably, even the pro-abortion American Psychological Association has admitted that women who feel pressured into abortion are more likely to suffer more severe psychological distress.

Instead of reporting on the verifiable scientific facts surrounding abortion, major media outlets are committed to killing coverage of any studies that contradict either of the two most essential pro-abortion myths: (1) abortion has no risks, and (2) women only have abortions when it improves their lives.

In fact, there is no longer any scientific doubt that abortion contributes to increased death rates and mental health problems among women.  The only dispute is when, if ever, abortion is the sole cause of the elevated rates of death and mental illness among women who have abortions. 

But most mental illnesses, including deaths from suicide and drug overdose, are due to multiple factors.  Plus, everywhere else in medicine, any evidence that a treatment may be a contributing factor to unwanted outcomes requires disclosure of this risk to patients. The lengthy disclaimers that follow television commercials for a host of everyday medications are a prime example. 



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