Stabroek News Sunday

Abortion rates highest where legally restricted – study

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(SciDev.Net) - Abortion rates are highest in countries that legally restrict access to terminatio­ns, but lowest in high-income countries where abortion and contracept­ion are accessible, a new study has found.

Women in the world’s poorest regions are three times more likely to experience an unplanned pregnancy than women in the global North. Abortion rates are also highest in middle- and low-income countries, the research found.

The number of unintended pregnancie­s has dropped globally over the past 30 years, but the proportion of abortions has increased — though there has been a slight decline in countries where abortion is broadly legal. The findings are part of a Lancet Global Health study by the Guttmacher Institute, a sexual and reproducti­ve health research and policy organisati­on, and the United Nations’ Human Reproducti­on Programme, published last Thursday.

Only half of women in developing regions receive appropriat­e levels of health care, the UN notes. The Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals aim to ensure universal access to sexual and reproducti­ve health services and include reproducti­ve health in national programmes.

The higher number of abortions in developing countries is likely to be caused by lack of access to contracept­ion that is affordable and acceptable, say the researcher­s, while family planning programmes likely contribute­d to declines in unintended pregnancie­s.

“These findings emphasise the importance of ensuring access to the full spectrum of sexual and reproducti­ve health services, including contracept­ion and abortion care, and for additional investment towards equity in healthcare services,” say the authors.

“[A]ccess to safe and legal abortion as

A pregnant mother receives antenatal care, at Teuk Thla health centre in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Women in the world’s poorest regions are three times more likely to experience an unplanned pregnancy. Copyright: Dominic Chavez/The Global Financing Facility. (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

well as contracept­ion increases reproducti­ve autonomy. Limits on access to services, in contrast, contribute to unintended pregnancy and, when access is limited, unsafe abortion.”

Sarah Hawkes, co-founder and codirector of gender equality organisati­on Global Health 50/50, says the study sheds light on population-level data relating to reproducti­ve health.

“The good news is that rates of unintended pregnancie­s have declined over time, but benefits of this decline have not been equally shared by all women in all

countries,” says Hawkes, who was not involved in the study.

“A woman’s right to access to essential sexual and reproducti­ve health services, which includes effective contracept­ive services, should be realised universall­y, irrespecti­ve of her economic position or the economic wealth of her country.”

The study found that women living in countries with broadly legal abortion had the lowest rates of unintended pregnancy and the largest decline in the incidence of abortion.

That finding “lends credence to the

point that abortion services are part of a comprehens­ive rights-based package of sexual and reproducti­ve health care that should be available to all women”, Hawkes says.

According to the study, between 2015 and 2019 there were 121 million unintended pregnancie­s annually, 61 per cent of which ended in abortion.

Where abortion is restricted, the annual average unintended pregnancy rate was 73 per 1000 women during that period, with

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