Abortion Rate Hits 30-Year Low, Smaller
Decrease
Among Black and Hispanic Women -- Part One
of ThreeEditor's note. Lots of
interesting stuff today. Part Two
is must reading for those who want to know about the latest
efforts to suppress all knowledge of Sen. Barack Obama's
across-the-board pro-abortion voting record.
Part Three talks about still
another effort to squelch freedom of conscience. All comments
are welcome at
daveandrusko@hotmail.com.
While, thankfully, the number of abortions has
continued to decline, a new study from the Guttmacher Institute
concludes that the proportion of abortions among older women,
women of color, and women who have already given birth has
risen. By contrast, the unambiguous success story is among
teenagers, whose abortions have dropped by huge numbers.
Guttmacher formerly was the research arm of Planned Parenthood,
but its results are still treated with deference.
Written by Stanley K. Henshaw and Kathryn Kost,
"Trends in the Characteristics of Women Obtaining Abortions,
1974 to 2004" was officially released today. Guttmacher used
data collected annually by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention and its own periodic surveys of abortion "providers."
A summary of the study's findings can be read at
www.guttmacher.org/media/nr/2008/09/23/index.html.
There is one begrudging concession to the work
of the Pro-Life Movement: the "suggestion" that "at least a part
of the decline in the abortion rate among these women
[teenagers] was due to an increase in the proportion of
unintended pregnancies continued to a birth…and changing
attitudes toward abortion."
First, the good news. The abortion rate fell
to its lowest level since 1974---20/1,000 women of childbearing
age (15-44). In 1980 there were 29 abortions per thousand women,
15-44.
The proportion of abortions obtain by all
categories of teenagers dropped, according to Guttmacher. For
example, for women under 20, in 1974 they obtained exactly a
third of all abortions. That dropped by almost exactly half--to
17%.
Likewise, girls under 18 had only 6% of all
abortions in 2004. In 1974 it was 2 ½ times higher--15%. That
decline did not manifest itself in older women.
The proportion of abortions obtained by women
older than 30 increased by half--from 18% to 27%. Women in the
middle (in their twenties) increased their proportion from 50%
to 57%.
Newsweek put it this way: "What researchers
found is contrary to what pop culture phenoms, from 'Juno' to
Jamie Lynn Spears, might suggest: Teenagers are not the most
likely to confront this issue, twenty-somethings are." In fact,
teenagers are confronting the "issue," but are choosing life.
Another sharp demarcation fell along racial
lines. Abortions dropped among all groups, but not nearly as
much for African-American and Hispanic women. For example,
between 1974 and 2004, the abortion rate for black women fell by
15%; for Hispanic women it dropped by one-fifth; and for
non-Hispanic white women it declined by 30%.
Consequently, by 2004, "there were 10.5
abortions per 1,000 white women ages 15 to 44, compared with 28
per 1,000 Hispanic women of that age and 50 per 1,000 black
women," the Washington Post reported today. "That translates
into approximately 1 percent of white women having an abortion
in 2004, compared with 3 percent of Hispanic women and 5 percent
of black women."
In addition, for women who already had a
child, the proportion of all abortions jumped from 46% in 1974
to 60% in 2004, Guttmacher reports.
NRLC Director Education Dr. Randall K.
O'Bannon noted that while there is no new data in the Guttmacher
report, the overall message is that the rate of abortion has
declined by almost half since 1974.
"This is no accident," O'Bannon said. "It
reflects the hard work at the grassroots level and in the halls
of the legislature." It is distressing, he said, that while
abortions have dropped among all ethnic groups, that decline was
much less among black women and Hispanic women.
"Our task as a Movement is to do everything we
can to make sure that welcomed decline continues across all age,
racial, and demographic lines," O'Bannon said. "In the light of
the drop in abortions, it is also no accident that the
pro-abortion leadership eagerly anticipates the passage of the
'Freedom of Choice Act' which would greatly multiply the number
of dead babies by gutting all protective laws."
Part Two
-- Imagine Being
Surprised
Part Three -- Australian State
Abortion Bill Threatens Conscience Rights |