Another Pro-Abortion
Attack on Research Documenting that Abortion Hurts Women
Part One of Three
By Dave Andrusko
Editor's note. Good
evening and thanks for taking time to read TN&V and National
Right to Life News Today. Part Two is encouraging news that a
Madison medical facility has changed its plans and will not
perform second-trimester abortions. Part Three takes its
inspiration from a raft of news stories that grasp how much
momentum the Movement has after the November 2 elections. Over
at National Right to Life News Today (www.nationalrighttolifenews.org),
we talk about a judge who while he did not stop a new Alaska
parental notice from taking effect did make considerable change.
Wesley Smith also celebrates Pro-Life Momentum, as we do the
news that pro-life Rep. Joe Pitts will chair a hugely important
House subcommittee. Please send your comments on Today's News &
Views and National Right to Life News Today to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
If you like, join those who are following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Among
the strongest pillars upholding the continued viability of
legalized abortion is the faulty conclusion (as expressed in
2008 by the pro-abortion American Psychological Association)
that "There is no credible evidence that a single elective
abortion of an unwanted pregnancy in and of itself causes mental
health problems for adult women." So as the number of studies
mount showing that many women (at least 30%) suffer from serious
physical and/or mental health aftereffects from their abortion,
you could be sure pro-abortionists would unload a withering
barrage of criticism.
The latest round of
scholarly putdowns--in this case against an important study
published by Coleman et al. in 2008 in the Journal of
Psychiatric Research-- was unleashed this week by researchers
with obvious connections to the Abortion Establishment. Indeed
it would harder to get better anti-life credentials than Julia
Steinberg of the University of California, San Francisco, and
Lawrence Finer of the Guttmacher Institute
[Is it an accident that
their stinging critique comes on the heels of an op-ed written
by Dr. Brenda Major published last month in the Washington Post,
charging that "Rigorous U.S. scientific studies have not
substantiated the claim that abortion, compared with its
alternatives, causes an increased incidence of mental health
problems"? It certainly is no coincidence that Dr. Major chaired
the American Psychological Association's highly biased Task
Force which produced the APA's Report on Abortion and Mental
Health.]
Writing in Social Science
& Medicine, Steinberg and Finer brusquely dismiss the results of
the 2008 study. In a statement dripping with condescension and
released with their paper, Steinberg wrote, "We were unable to
reproduce the most basic tabulations of Coleman and colleagues,"
adding, "Moreover, their findings were logically inconsistent
with other published research." For good measure, Steinberg
writes, "This suggests that the results were substantially
inflated" (emphasis added).
So what was it that
Coleman, Coyle, Shuping, and Rue found? Let's begin with the
purpose of their study--"To examine associations between
abortion history and a wide range of anxiety (panic disorder,
panic attacks, PTSD, Agoraphobia), mood (bipolar disorder,
mania, major depression), and substance abuse disorders (alcohol
and drug abuse and dependence) using a nationally representative
US sample, the national comorbidity survey." [The NCS is "widely
recognized as the first nationally representative survey of
mental health in the United States."]
The most notable
conclusion of "Induced abortion and anxiety, mood, and substance
abuse disorders: Isolating the effects of abortion in the
national comorbidity survey" was, "The strongest effects based
on the attributable risks indicated that abortion is responsible
for more than 10% of the population incidence of alcohol
dependence, alcohol abuse, drug dependence, panic disorder,
agoraphobia, and bipolar disorder in the population. Lower
percentages were identified for 6 additional diagnoses."
Given the personal nature
of Steinberg's and Finer's attack--"Antiabortion activists have
relied on questionable science in their efforts to push
inclusion of the concept of 'post-abortion syndrome' in both
clinical practice and law"-- there is great irony in the
concluding paragraph to Coleman et al.'s paper.
"The academic debate [over
abortion and mental health] was fueled by socio-political
agendas that impeded and at time contaminated scientific
efforts," they wrote. "Recent years have however ushered in
large scale, methodologically sophisticated studies…"
The Steinberg/Finer paper
is 45-pages long, but the core of their critique is simple.
There is no significant relationship between abortion history
and substance abuse or mood and anxiety disorders once you look
at "other factors, such as preexisting mental health disorders
and sexual or physical violence before the abortion," as the
Washington Post's Rob Stein summarized the argument. "[T]hey
found that women who had had multiple abortions were more likely
to have those risk factors before the abortion compared with
women who had had one or no abortions."
This is the most common
pro-abortion response--indeed, in some ways it is the only
pro-abortion response: Women who have post-abortion difficulties
came to their abortions with emotional baggage.
As Steinberg and Finer
wrote, "Women likely to have negative psychological outcomes
following an abortion are those least apt to cope with any
stressful life event including giving birth to an unwanted
pregnancy" (italics in the original). It is not a consequence OF
the abortion.
In response to an inquiry,
Prof. Coleman wrote back, "Despite their many claims to have
conducted a 're-analysis' of our study, Steinberg and Finer have
conducted a very different set of analyses. The critical
distinction is in how the psychological disorders were defined.
Our analyses reflected 12-month prevalence and their analyses
reflected only the 30-day prevalence. Our results are quite
similar to those reported by pro-choice researcher David
Fergusson and many others. There are additional differences
between the two sets of analyses, most notably related to the
choice of potential confounding variables and the methods used
to control them in the analyses."
Coleman continued, "Do
these authors have plans to 'replicate' the 2010 study by Mota
and colleagues published in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry?
These authors also used the National Comorbidity Survey
Replication data and their results were quite consistent with
ours.
"I find it hard to imagine
that Steinberg and Finer believe a journal as reputable as the
Journal of Psychiatric Research--edited by Alan Schatzberg,
M.D., president-elect of the American Psychiatric
Association--would publish an article indicating that abortion
poses psychological risks to women independent of other
stressors without scrutinizing the methodology carefully."
There are a number of
other weaknesses.
First, Finer has worked
for years for Guttmacher, the intellectual arm of the Abortion
Establishment. Steinberg works at the University of California
at San Francisco.
It would be difficult to
exaggerate how prominent an abortion proponent UCSF has been
over the decades. Carol Joffe, a prominent abortion activist who
is one of the professors at UCSF's Bixby Center for Global
Reproductive Health and helped put together the "Abortion
Pioneers" booklet [featuring UCSF faculty], outlined the place
of UCSF in the abortion movement:
"What UCSF has done, more
so than any other medical institution I can think of, has been
to integrate abortion into mainstream medical care," she said.
"The message that this medical school gives the rest of medicine
is that abortion is a normal part of women's reproductive
health" (p. 17) [See
http://www.nrlc.org/NewsToday/HighPowered.html].
Second, the result of the
research of Coleman et al. is not an isolated outlier. It is
part of a wave of research--including by self-described
"pro-choicers" such as Prof. Fergusson--that has reached the
same conclusion: there are serious mental health consequences
associated with having an abortion.
For example, writing in
the December 2008 issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry,
Prof. Fergusson, John Horwood, and Dr. Joseph Boden from New
Zealand's Otago University reported a 30% higher rate of mental
health problems among women who had aborted. The conditions most
associated with abortion included anxiety disorders and
substance use disorders.
The study ("Abortion and
mental health disorders: evidence from a 30-year longitudinal
study") was of over 500 women born in one city, who were
interviewed six times between the ages of 15 and 30.
The trio of researchers
estimated that between 1.5% and 5.5% of the overall rate of
mental disorders in this group of women could be accounted for
by their abortions.
There were two other
inter-related considerations. To begin with, "none of the other
pregnancy outcomes [other than abortion] were consistently
related to significantly increased risks of mental health
problems."
Moreover, the evidence
"clearly poses a challenge to the use of psychiatric reasons to
justify abortion," Fergusson told the Daily Mail. "There is
nothing in this study that would suggest that the termination of
pregnancy was associated with lower risks of mental health
problems than birth."
Third, in Prof. Coleman
response to Dr. Major's Washington Post op-ed, she pointed out,
"Over 30 studies have been published in just the last five years
and they add to a body of literature comprised of hundreds of
studies published in major medicine and psychology journals
throughout the world." She added, "No lies, just
scientifically-derived information that individual academics,
several major professional organizations, and abortion providers
have done their best to hide and distort in recent years."
The conclusion that
abortion has a devastating aftermath for women "has been voiced
by prominent researchers in Great Britain, Norway, New Zealand,
Australia, South Africa, the U.S., and elsewhere," Coleman
wrote. Major's "op-ed provides another illustration of the
dishonesty permeating the scientific study and dissemination of
information pertaining to abortion and mental health" (www.nrlc.org/News_and_Views/Nov10/nv111210part2.html).
Part Two
Part Three |