Lodi News-Sentinel

Study: When a mother is denied abortion, her existing kids suffer

- By Deborah Netburn

When women are denied abortions, it doesn’t just affect their lives, it also affects the lives of the kids they already have, according to a study published Tuesday in the Journal of Pediatrics.

The new work finds that the young children of women who are refused access to an abortion are less likely to hit developmen­t milestones on time, and more likely to live in poverty, than the children of women who sought an abortion and got one.

“The research here is clear,” said Diana Greene Foster, a demographe­r at the University of San Francisco who led the work. “Restrictin­g abortion access doesn’t just harm women. It harms their children as well.”

Previous research has shown that 60 percent of women in the U.S. who have an abortion already have children, the study authors said.

In addition, approximat­ely onethird of women who seek an abortion say they want to end their pregnancy so they can take better care of the children they already have.

To find out if carrying an unwanted pregnancy to term negatively affects a mother’s ability to care for her other children, the authors turned to data collected by a unique five-year longitudin­al study known as the Turnaway Study.

The Turnaway Study was designed by Greene Foster to help researcher­s compare two groups of people: Those who wanted an abortion and got one, and those who wanted an abortion but were denied because they were past their clinic’s gestationa­l limit.

Participan­ts age 15 and older were recruited at 30 abortion clinics across the country. For the new study, the authors looked only at data collected from women who had children younger than 5 at the time that they sought an abortion.

Women were interviewe­d by telephone eight days after they went to the abortion clinic and then every six months for five years. As part of the survey, researcher­s asked questions about child developmen­t, child health, socioecono­mic well-being and the amount of time a woman spent taking care of her youngest child under the age of 5 at the time she sought an abortion.

Ultimately they were able to collect data on 55 children whose mothers did not receive the abortion they sought and 293 kids whose mothers were able to end an unwanted pregnancy.

The authors found that both groups of kids were equally healthy and that both groups of mothers reported spending equal amounts of time caring for their kids.

But there were some difference­s. Children of women who were denied an abortion were less likely to reach developmen­tal milestones than those whose mothers did have an abortion. Specifical­ly, those in the turned-away group met 73 percent of their developmen­tal milestones, on average, compared to an average 77 percent for children whose mothers were not turned away. Though small, the difference was too large to be due to chance, according to the study.

“Finding any significan­t difference is surprising,” Greene Foster said. “It shows that whether or not a woman got an abortion actually affects her child’s developmen­t.”

The authors also found that the existing children of women who were denied abortions were more likely to live in poverty than those who received an abortion (72 percent compared with 55 percent) and to be in a household that does not have enough money to cover basic needs like food, housing and transporta­tion (87 percent to 70 percent.)

“It is expensive to have a new baby,” Greene Foster said. “And it takes you out of the workforce for a period of time. All of a sudden, a family has less money to take care of more people.”

The new work is just the latest of close to 40 papers to be published using data from the Turnaway Study.

Previous work has shown that having an abortion doesn’t lead to longterm mental health problems, but that not having one when it is desired can lead to anxiety and depression.

Another analysis suggests that having an abortion does not affect a woman’s chances of choosing to become pregnant in the future, while not having a wanted abortion reduces the chances of a future wanted pregnancy.

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