The Columbus Dispatch

WHO chief: Abortion ruling ‘a setback’

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“I know from my own experience, working in India, that having access to safe abortion is a life-saving measure.” Dr. Soumya Swaminatha­n, WHO’S chief scientist

GENEVA – The head of the World Health Organizati­on on Wednesday criticized the U.S. Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. calling the decision to no longer recognize a constituti­onal right to abortion “a setback” that would ultimately cost lives.

WHO Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said during a media briefing that decades of scientific data prove that access to safe and legal abortion saves lives.

“The evidence is irrefutabl­e,” Tedros said. “Restrictin­g (abortion) drives women and girls toward unsafe abortions resulting in complicati­ons, even death.” He said safe abortion should be understood as health care and warned that limiting access would disproport­ionately hit women from the poorest and most marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

“We hadn’t really expected this from the U.S.,” Tedros said, adding that he was concerned the Supreme Court’s decision was a move “backwards.” In recent years, the U.S. has supported numerous maternal health care programs in developing countries, including access to reproducti­ve health care.

“We had really hoped the U.S. would lead on this issue,” Tedros said.

WHO’S chief scientist, Dr. Soumya Swaminatha­n, said the U.N. health agency’s position on abortion was based on decades of data from numerous countries.

“I know from my own experience, working in India, that having access to safe abortion is a life-saving measure,” Swaminatha­n said. She said denying a woman access to abortion was “like denying someone a life-saving drug.”

She said bans on abortion would do little to reduce the number of procedures while people who undergo unsafe abortions are at risk of developing fatal blood infections.

“What these bans do … is it drives women into the hands of people who are there to exploit the situation, performing unsafe abortion and very often resulting in a huge amount of damage to their health and sometimes death,” Swaminatha­n said.

In recent years, the trend among countries has been to increase access to abortion, including regions where there was staunch opposition, like Latin America, she said.

“It’s unfortunat­e to see some countries going backward,” Swaminatha­n said, citing the U.S. decision.

WHO chief Tedros said he feared many other countries might not understand the implicatio­ns of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling and could take similar measures to restrict abortions.

“The global impact is also a concern,” he said. “This is about the life of mother,” he said. “If safe abortion is illegal, then women will definitely resort to unsafe ways of doing it. And that means it could cost them their lives.”

 ?? NARDUS ENGELBRECH­T/AP ?? WHO Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said during a media briefing that years of scientific data prove that access to safe and legal abortion saves lives.
NARDUS ENGELBRECH­T/AP WHO Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said during a media briefing that years of scientific data prove that access to safe and legal abortion saves lives.

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