For teen girls, abortion linked to better
outcomes vs. giving birth
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[July 21, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - Compared to teen
mothers, girls who have an abortion before age 18 have no negative
effects that carry into early adulthood, a nationwide study in Finland
suggests.
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Girls who had underage abortions tended to have higher educational
attainment and were less likely to be dependent on welfare at age 25
compared to the girls who gave birth, the study team found.
“This is the result we were expecting,” said coauthor Oskari
Heikinheimo of University of Helsinki and the Helsinki University
Central Hospital.
Previous studies have linked teen motherhood to lower educational
levels and worse physical and mental health in adulthood, but had
not analyzed the same outcomes after abortion, the authors write in
the journal Human Reproduction, online July 7.
“It becomes clear that really the only difference was, young women
who went on to continue the pregnancy and deliver, their overall
level of education was then lower than women who chose to have an
abortion,” Heikinheimo told Reuters Health. “And of course it
certainly makes a lot of sense.”
In the developed world, a large proportion of all teenage
pregnancies end in induced abortion, he and his co-authors write.
Among 15- to 19-year-olds, this proportion has been 30 percent in
the U.S., 43 percent in the UK, 77 percent in Sweden and 59 percent
in Finland in recent years, they add.
According to the CDC, there were 249,000 babies born to women 15 to
19 years old in 2014 in the U.S. Only about 50 percent of teen
mothers attain a high school diploma by age 22 compared to 90
percent of teen girls who don’t give birth, the agency says.
For the new study, the researchers analyzed data on 29,000 women
born in Finland in 1987 and followed until 2012 when they were 25
years old. Of that group, 394 gave birth and 1,041 had abortions
before age 18. The researchers compared the two groups with teen
pregnancies to each other and to a reference group of women with no
pregnancies before age 20.
The risk of psychiatric disorders and drug overdose by age 25 was
similar for those who had an abortion and those who gave birth. The
authors note that compared to the reference group, both groups with
teen pregnancies were more economically disadvantaged and had higher
levels of risk-taking behavior before and after becoming pregnant.
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But compared to girls who gave birth, those who had an abortion got
higher grades in school and tended to come from families with higher
socioeconomic status. Both groups had lower levels of parental
education and a higher need for income support in childhood than the
reference group.
“I’m very glad about these results because there is a lot of
misinformation about abortion,” particularly in American political
discourse, Heikinheimo said.
The Finnish political and social attitude toward reproductive
choices is more liberal than in other countries, including the U.S.,
Heikinheimo said. In terms of risk factors, unplanned pregnancy is
one piece in a complicated puzzle.
“It would be very important that even for young women who choose to
have a child that society do its best to guarantee they have a
chance to continue schooling,” he said. “Family planning services
should be available for those who need them.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ah0EHI
Hum Reprod 2016.
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