NEW ANALYSIS OF MATERNAL
MORTALITY CONFIRMS HEALTH CARE,
NOT ABORTION, KEY FACTOR IN SAVING LIVES
Call for renewed WHA focus on
improving women’s health care in developing
world
GENEVA, Switzerland — Improved
medical care, not abortion, is the solution to
the problem of maternal deaths in the developing
world, according to a
new analysis of research from the World
Health Organization, United Nations, The
Lancet and other resources. The analysis
was released today at the World Health Assembly
(WHA) in Geneva by Minnesota Citizens Concerned
for Life Global Outreach (MCCL GO) and National
Right to Life Educational Trust Fund (NRLC),
based in Washington, D.C. Leaders of both
organizations called for a renewed emphasis on
improving health care for women as the only sure
means of reducing maternal mortality.
“We have known for decades
that most maternal deaths can be prevented with
adequate nutrition, basic health care, and good
obstetric care throughout pregnancy, at
delivery, and postpartum,”
said Jeanne Head, R.N., National Right to Life
vice-president for international affairs and UN
representative. “Yet
some in the international community have focused
their resources primarily on legalizing abortion
at the expense of women’s lives.”
“Our analysis presents clear,
factual evidence to repudiate the claim that
legalized abortion reduces maternal mortality,”
said MCCL Global Outreach Executive Director
Scott Fischbach.
The analysis, “Why Legalized
Abortion Is Not Good for Women’s Health,”
compares the impact of improved medical care and
legalized abortion on maternal mortality rates
in several countries. Maternal deaths declined
sharply in the United States, England and Wales
through the 1930s and 1940s, for example,
coinciding with advancements in maternal health
care, obstetric techniques, antibiotics and in
the general health status of women. This
occurred long before the widespread legalization
of abortion. Chile sharply reduced its maternal
mortality rate even after its prohibition of
abortion in 1989, and now has the lowest
maternal mortality rate in Latin America. Of
the four countries that reduced their maternal
mortality rate the most from 1990-2008, three
have maintained bans on abortion.
In the developing world, the
danger of legalized abortion is profound, the
analysis found. Ms. Head explains:
“Women generally at risk because
they lack access to a doctor, hospital, or
antibiotics before abortion’s legalization will
face those same circumstances after
legalization. And if legalization triggers a
higher demand for abortion, as it has in most
countries, more injured women will compete for
those scarce medical resources. The number of
abortion-related maternal deaths may actually
increase.”
MCCL GO and NRLC called upon the
WHA to focus its resources on the improvement of
women’s health care in the developing world.
“We urge the World Health
Assembly to adopt measures to significantly
reduce maternal mortality in the developing
world by improving women’s health care,”
Mr. Fischbach added.
“We call upon the WHA to save lives, not expend
endless energy and resources in areas where
there is profound disagreement, such as the
legalization of abortion.”
The analysis is available in
English on the
National Right to Life website, and in
English and Spanish (and soon in French) at the
MCCL GO website.
Copies are available in English at the WHA
Geneva conference by calling Mr. Fischbach on
(320) 492-9062.
The
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the
federation of 50 state right-to-life
organizations and more than 3,000 local chapters
nationwide, is the nation's largest pro-life
group and an accredited non-governmental
organization (NGO) at the United Nations.
National Right to Life works through legislation
and education to protect those threatened by
abortion, infanticide, euthanasia and assisted
suicide.