Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Abortion Rate Steady In Poor Nations, Plunging In Rich Ones

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 May, 2016 10:45 AM
    LONDON — The rate of abortions in the developed world has dropped to an all-time low while remaining steady in poorer regions, where nearly 90 per cent of the abortions worldwide occur, researchers say in a new study published Wednesday in the journal Lancet.
     
    In the first analysis of global abortion trends since 2008, scientists found that 56 million abortions are performed globally every year among women aged 15 to 44, and that about one in four pregnancies ends in abortion. Nearly three-quarters of abortions are obtained by married women.
     
    The researchers used government data and modeling techniques to calculate their estimates.
     
    The rate in rich countries fell to an all-time low between 1990 and 2014, from about 46 abortions per 1,000 women in 1990 to 27 abortions per 1,000 women in 2014.
     
    But in the developing world, the rate remained virtually unchanged, at about 37 abortions per 1,000 women.
     
    "Family planning services do not seem to be keeping pace with the increasing desire for smaller families," said Gilda Sedgh of the Guttmacher Institute, a U.S. research group that supports abortion rights and the paper's lead author.
     
    The world's highest rate of abortions was in the Caribbean, at about 65 abortions per 1,000 women. The lowest rate was in North America, at 17. The biggest drop was in Eastern Europe, where the abortion rate fell to 42 abortions per 1,000 women from 88.
     
    There was no difference in the incidence of abortion in countries where the procedure is legal versus where it is heavily restricted or outlawed.
     
    "The obvious interpretation is that criminalizing abortion does not prevent it but rather drives women to seek illegal services or methods," wrote Diana Greene Foster of the University of California in San Francisco, in an accompanying commentary. She said the new estimates could help researchers predict the consequences of policies including expanding family planning programs, liberalizing abortion laws and developing new birth control methods.
     
    Researchers also said about 225 million women in the developing world aren't able to access birth control.
     
    Women in other studies have said that was because they feared the side effects of contraception methods or were worried about the stigma of not being married when seeking birth control.
     
    The study was paid for by governments including Britain, the Netherlands and Norway, several U.N. agencies and others.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna

    Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — The three Maritime premiers said Monday their provinces badly need more immigrants, even as a former New Brunswick premier proposed his own solution: require newcomers to live in the region.

    Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna

    Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis

    Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis
    World-renowned HIV experts from British Columbia are stepping in to help control a massive outbreak of the disease in rural Indiana.

    Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis

    Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

    Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them
    Even though fewer U.S. teens are smoking, secondhand smoke remains a big problem for them, a government study found.

    Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

    3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

    3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries
    The pediatric surgeons hover over a tiny heart, gently retracting delicate inner structures and attaching a graft with impossibly intricate stitches to repair a congenital defect that would mean certain death within days of birth.

    3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

    Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

    Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls
    Nearly every girl and woman on Earth carries two X chromosomes in each of her cells -- but one of them does (mostly) nothing. Do you know why?

    Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

    Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia

    Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia
    A scientific paper released on January 6, provides the first published evidence that a European variant of infectious salmon anaemia virus (ISAV) is present in British Columbia, Canada. 

    Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia