A study examining 17 years of patient data has found absolutely no evidence that having an abortion increases the risk of suicide, despite many women being told the opposite.
Examining years of data collected from over half a million women in Denmark, researchers conclude that heightened suicide attempts are not caused by abortion. Instead, pre-existing health issues, like the use of psychiatric services and anti-depressants, are far better at predicting suicide risks.
“The view that having an abortion leads to suicidal thoughts, plans, or even suicide attempts has been used to inform abortion policies in some regions of the world, particularly laws requiring women seeking the procedure be informed of this view,” says reproductive health scientist Julia Steinberg from the University of Maryland.
“The evidence from our study does not support this notion.”
Nevertheless, in many places, doctors are obliged to tell patients unvalidated information about abortion’s negative psychological or emotional effects, which can include that it increases the risk of having suicidal thoughts.
The warning is based on studies fraught with limitations and flaws, and in recent years, several researchers have tried to reproduce these findings with more rigorous methods.
Instead of looking simply at mental health after an abortion, the new studies compared mental states before and after, while also accounting for histories of psychiatric illnesses and other confounding factors.
Last year, a five-year analysis of nearly 1,000 women found that levels of suicidal ideation were similarly low among those who had abortions and those who were denied abortions.
At the same time, it also revealed that women who seek abortions at a later gestational age are at no higher risk of suicidal thoughts. Instead, the authors say a history of mental health conditions and intimate partner violence are much more predictive.
“Policies requiring women to be warned that they are at increased risk of becoming suicidal if they choose abortion are not evidence based,” the study concluded.
Other reviews on the safety and efficacy of abortion have also found it does not increase the risk of depression, anxiety, or post-traumatic stress.
The most recent research from Denmark draws upon a particularly long data bank with its 17 years’ worth of patient records, and it once again agrees with the previous results. Using data from national patient registries, it examined non-fatal suicide attempts and self-harm among women with first-time abortions in the first trimester.
Unlike previous research, which failed to consider prior mental health issues and the downsides of self-reporting on abortion and suicide, the new study follows its patients from the year before the abortion to the year after.
Adjusting for age, year, the history of childbirth, mental health, physical health, and socioeconomic status, the team concluded abortion could not be causing or increasing the risk of suicide attempts.
“When we examined the monthly incidence rates of suicide attempts in the year before and after an abortion for all women who had an abortion,” the authors write, “women with a previous psychiatric contact, and women with no previous psychiatric contact, we found no changes in incidence rates from the year before to the year after the abortion for all three groups.”
To be fair, the study did not look at the effect of later abortions or multiple abortions on mental health, but the findings suggest that at least in the case of early first abortions, suicide is not a risk stemming from the procedure.
The authors argue any policies based on that notion are therefore “misinformed”.
“The increased risk of non-fatal suicide attempts in women who have had an abortion might be related to other co-occurring risk factors around the time of the unwanted pregnancy and abortion, such as intimate partner violence, unstable relationships, or other negative life events, for which Steinberg and colleagues could not adjust,” explains social and behavioural scientist Jenneke van Ditzhuijzen from the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, who was not involved in the study but is the author of a commentary published alongside it.
“This does not mean that having an abortion is an indication that women are going through a difficult time, or that the symptoms of mental disorders are attributable to the abortion, but rather that some women are at an elevated risk of multiple adversities at a certain period in their life, which could include an unwanted pregnancy and abortion.”
The study was published in The Lancet Psychiatry.
December 5, 2019 at 1:49 pm
The flip side of the coin here is postpartum osteoporosis, which hit the daughter of a friend. Thanks to her pregnancy, she now has the skeleton of an eighty-year-old woman (she’s 32). It’ll be another six months before she’ll be able to go back to work; she just started being able to hold her six-month-old a couple of weeks ago.
You’re not going to find the “crisis pregnancy clinics” of the so-called “pro-lifers” talking about this.
The good news is, it’s so rare that they haven’t been able to find what causes it. But it happens.
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December 6, 2019 at 4:24 am
Bet that last paragraph slipped in before you realized what you were saying.
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December 6, 2019 at 12:23 pm
To John Dunkle: So far you have not answered my questions, posted Dec 3. BTW, I see you only read the New Testament. Before I learned enough to realize the whole Bible was just fiction, I was instructed that both Old and New Testaments make up the total word of God including before he sent his son. I guess in your whead, just dismiss difficult passages.
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December 7, 2019 at 1:37 pm
I just checked, David. You want to know who’s going to pay for it. You and your pro-death buddies are, I hope. Now you guys have us pro-lifers paying to torture people to death. What’s that, quid pro quo? .
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December 7, 2019 at 4:17 pm
Explain how you pay for any abortions, which typically cost well under $1000. We actually save you money because you don’t have to pay $150,000 for K-12 school or any medicaid and social help for low/no income parents who are not financially able to raise the child but cannot break the 9 month bond and think they will be able to raise the child on love alone. Obviously, you are totally ignorant of much of the real world.
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December 8, 2019 at 4:43 am
Typical pro-death response — the gratuitous insult, the name calling.
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December 9, 2019 at 2:27 pm
“The gratuitous insult, the name calling”??? And you don’t do that? I suspect you are one of the many anti-choice types who suggest pro-choice escorts are like Nazis when you compare abortion clinics to Auschwitz. Tell us if you have never done that. That’s the Trtump approach – throw out insults but say its not nice when someone does the same to him, and use that as a dodge away from the question. BTW, what part of what I wrote in name calling? Insulting, yes, but not name calling.
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December 10, 2019 at 4:44 am
“Totally ignorant” is name calling, David. Otherwise, not a bad response. And i do equate mills to auschwitzes and deathscorts to Nazis, and 99% of us to the “good Germans” who looked on as the horror happened.
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