Khaleej Times

Abortions are 20 times higher than estimated

- Reuters

new delhi — Some 15.6 million abortions take place in India each year, with the majority of women taking pills at home without adequate counsellin­g, a study said, calling for more trained doctors in public hospitals.

The New York-based Guttmacher Institute’s research found that abortions are 22 times more common than the government’s estimate of less than 700,000 terminatio­ns, produced by focusing on state-run hospitals and clinics.

Just over 80 per cent of abortions took place using drugs like mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l, 14 per cent were performed surgically in clinics and hospitals, and 5 per cent were conducted using other, typically unsafe, methods. “Women in India face considerab­le challenges trying to obtain abortion care, including the limited availabili­ty of abortion services in public health facilities,” the Guttmacher Institute’s investigat­or Susheela Singh, said.

“Our findings suggest that a shortage of trained staff and inadequate supplies and equipment are the primary reasons many public facilities don’t provide abortion care,” she said of the study, published in the Lancet Global Health journal. It is India’s first national study of the incidence of abortion and unintended pregnancy, researcher­s said.

Half of India’s more than 48 million pregnancie­s were unintended, and a third resulted in abortions, the study said, using 2015 abortion pill sales and distributi­on data and surveys of six highly populated states.

Researcher­s said that close to

Key findings of the US study

three in four abortions were achieved using drugs from chemists and informal vendors, rather than from health facilities where proper counsellin­g and health checks should be provided.

In addition, the public sector — the main source of health care for rural and poor women — accounted for only a quarter of abortions, partly unintended and a third resulted in abortions > Close to three in four abortions were achieved using drugs from chemists and informal vendors > Only 14 per cent abortions were performed surgically in clinics and hospitals because many state-run hospitals and clinics do not offer abortion services. “Although abortion has been legal under a broad range of criteria in India since 1971, we have never had a reliable estimate of the number occurring until now,” said Chander Shekhar from the Mumbai-based Internatio­nal Institute for Population Sciences. —

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