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Obstacles to Abortion and Comprehensive Reproductive Health Care

Obstacles to Abortion and Comprehensive Reproductive Health Care. Martin Donohoe, MD, FACP. Abortion in the U.S. 30 million women have had abortions since legalization (1973) 3 million unintended pregnancies per year in the U.S.

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Obstacles to Abortion and Comprehensive Reproductive Health Care

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  1. Obstacles to Abortion and Comprehensive Reproductive Health Care Martin Donohoe, MD, FACP

  2. Abortion in the U.S. • 30 million women have had abortions since legalization (1973) • 3 million unintended pregnancies per year in the U.S. • 1.3 million abortions in 2000 (↓ from 1.6 million in 1990, ↓27% since 1980)

  3. Abortion in the U.S. • 21.3 abortions/1,000 fertile women/year • 250 induced abortions/1,000 recognized pregnancies • 37% decline since 1982

  4. Abortion in the U.S. • 49% of all pregnancies are unintended, including more than 30% within marriage • Patients: • 48% over age 25 • 20% married • 56% have children • 43% Protestant, 27% Catholic

  5. Abortion in the U.S. • Patients: • 59% white • African-Americans and Hispanics more likely to have abortions than Caucasians, in part due to: • Higher levels of poverty • Higher rates of unintended pregnancy • Greater proportion of conceptions that end in abortion

  6. Most Important Reason Given for Terminating an Unwanted Pregnancy • Inadequate finances - 21% • Not ready for responsibility - 21% • Woman’s life would be changed too much - 16% • Problems with relationship; unmarried - 12% • Too young; not mature enough - 11%

  7. Most Important Reason Given for Terminating an Unwanted Pregnancy • Children are grown; woman has all she wants - 8% • Fetus has possible health problem - 3% • Woman has health problem - 3% • Pregnancy caused by rape, incest - 1% • Other - 4% • Average number of reasons given = 3.7

  8. Abortion in the U.S. • By age 45, the average female will have had 1.4 unintended pregnancies • 43% will have had an induced abortion • 58% of women with unintended pregnancies get pregnant while using birth control • 1 year contraceptive failure rates: periodic abstinence (21%), OCPs (7%), IUD (1-2%)

  9. Abortion in the U.S.:Public Opinion Split • 49% consider themselves more “pro-choice,” 46% more “pro-life” • 55% support woman’s right to first trimester abortion • Republicans less supportive than Democrats • 25-30% of members of both parties would not vote for a candidate who did not share their views on abortion

  10. Abortion in the U.S.:Public Opinion • 25-30% of American women think abortion should be legal and available in all circumstances • 17-19% think abortion should be illegal under all circumstances • The remainder would restrict abortion to cases of rape, incest, or to save a woman’s life

  11. Abortion in the U.S.:Public Opinion • Top priorities for the women’s movement • Reducing domestic violence and sexual assault 92% • Equal pay for equal work 90% • Keeping abortion legal 41% • 2/3 believe the Supreme Court will not overturn Roe v Wade • Center for the Advancement of Women surveys, 2001-2003 • Are we taking Roe v Wade for granted?

  12. Abortion Worldwide • 42 million/year • 48 unsafe (97% of these in developing countries) • 67,000 to 80,000 annual deaths (up to 8/hour) • 13% of all maternal deaths (585,000/year) • 1/4 - 1/2 of maternal deaths in Latin America

  13. Abortion Worldwide • 30 infections/injuries for every one abortion death • 220,000 children orphaned each year by poorly performed abortions • Use of mid-level providers can decrease complications and deaths

  14. Common Grounds on Which Abortion is Permitted Worldwide • To save woman’s life – 98% • To preserve physical health – 63% • To preserve mental health – 62% • Rape or incest – 43% • Fetal impairment – 39% • Economic or social reasons – 33% • On request – 27%

  15. Worldwide, every minute • 380 women become pregnant • 190 women face unplanned or unwanted pregnancies • 110 women experience pregnancy-related complications • 40 women have unsafe abortions • 1 woman dies

  16. Historical and Contemporary Methods of Unsafe Abortion • Many used for millenia • Examples: • Toxic solutions taken orally or intravaginally – e.g., mercury, acid, detergents, etc. • Uterine stimulant drugs • Foreign bodies placed in the cervix/uterus – e.g., sticks, wires, coat hangers, air blown from pump • Direct/indirect trauma

  17. Barriers to Abortion:Misconceptions about Contraception • Common among adolescents and physicians • Duration of oral contraceptive use not a factor

  18. Common misconceptions about OCPs • They cause weight gain (reality = 30% fain 1-2kg from fluid retention) • They cause acne and hirsutism (reality = less acne, no hirsutism) • They cause breast cancer (reality = minimal, if any, effect) • They impair future reproduction (reality = not true)

  19. Common misconceptions about OCPs: Lack of awareness of benefits re … • Decreased risk of ovarian and endometrial cancer • Regulation of cycles, prevention of dysmenorrhea and iron deficiency anemia • Decreased prevalence of PID and ensuing salpingitis and infertility • Increased bone density

  20. Barriers to Abortion:Availability of Contraception • Limited access to health care and lack of coverage • Until recently, Oregon Medicaid covered Viagra but not oral contraceptives • Planned Parenthood, other sliding scale clinics

  21. Barriers to Abortion:Availability of Contraception • OTC status for OCPs would improve access, is considered safe • Equity in Prescription Insurance and Contraceptive Coverage Act • Introduced in Congress in 1997; still unpassed • Would require health insurers to pay for birth control as they pay for prescription drugs

  22. Barriers to Abortion:Legal Viability • Roe vs. Wade (1973): Abortion legalized up to “point of viability” (currently 24 weeks) • After viability, states can ban abortion except when necessary to protect the woman’s life or health • Gestational limits (fetus < 500g or < 20 weeks gestational age)

  23. Barriers to Abortion:Cost • Cost: approx. $350-$450 (1st trimester); $750-$1300 (2nd trimester) • ¾ of patients pay out of pocket • only 1/3 of patients have private insurance coverage; only 1/3 of private insurance companies cover (after deductible met) • most insured patients reluctant to file due to confidentiality concerns

  24. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Medicaid: • Hyde Amendment (1978) prohibits federal Medicaid dollars from being spent on abortion, except to preserve the woman’s life or in cases of rape or incest • But, 22 states allocate Medicaid funding to cover most abortions

  25. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Medicaid: • Between 18% and 35% of Medicaid-eligible women who would have had abortions instead continue their pregnancies if public funding is unavailable

  26. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Medicare: • Hyde Amendment applied to Medicare in 1998 • Bans federal funding for abortions for disabled women except in cases of life endangerment, rape, or incest • No state funding of Medicare to make up the gap

  27. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Title X Family Planning Clinics: • Cover women from low income households at over 4500 family planning clinics • Ethnic minority women disproportionately represented • Funding has not kept up with inflation • Prohibited from using federal and non-federal funds for all abortions • “Gag rule” – 1981 to 1993

  28. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Indian Health Service: • Covers 1.5 million American Indians and Alaska Natives • Subject to Hyde Amendment restrictions

  29. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Military Personnel: • TRICARE (funded by Defense Dept.) covers 8.3 million uniformed personnel and their families • Permanent ban on abortion except where the life of the women is endangered

  30. Barriers to Abortion:Military Hospital Abortions Ban • Military women serving abroad, and their dependents, are prohibited from obtaining abortions at military hospitals, even if they pay with personal funds • EC not available at all military treatment facilities • Alternatives: • Travel long distances for abortion – expensive and requires permission from commander to take leave • Have abortion locally – unsafe in certain countries (e.g., in Middle East)

  31. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) • Covers over 8.5 million federal employees, their dependents, and retirees; 45% women • Since 1983 (except for 1994), abortion coverage permitted only in cases of life endangerment, rape, or incest

  32. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Peace Corps • 7300 volunteers; 61% women • Funds cannot be used for abortions, even when the woman’s life is endangered

  33. Barriers to Abortion:Coverage • Federal Prisons • 11,250 women • From 1987-present (except for 1994), ban on funding abortions except when woman’s life endangered or the pregnancy the result of rape

  34. Barriers to Abortion:Funding Cuts • U.S. opposes language in the Cairo Action Plan, such as “reproductive health care,” stating that this is a proxy for abortion • This halts U.S. participation in global efforts to prevent unintended pregnancies and control the spread of STDs, including HIV • Domestic family planning budget cuts will increase unwanted pregnancies and the abortion rate

  35. Barriers to Abortion:Limits on Availability of Emergency Contraception • EC available in 102 countries • Available OTC in parts of Canada and in S. Africa, UK, France, other European countries • Cost: $25-$40 • Less expensive options involving OCPs

  36. Barriers to Abortion:Limits on Availability of Emergency Contraception • Only seven states allow drug stores to sell over-the-counter emergency contraception • AK, CA, NM, WA, HI, ME, NH • NY may be next • Supported by ACOG, AAFP, AAP

  37. Barriers to Abortion:Limits on Availability of Emergency Contraception • Only five states mandate that emergency contraception be available to rape victims • IL, WA, NM, CA, NY • HI and CA have passed bills allowing pharmacists to directly prescribe emergency contraception • Other states considering

  38. Barriers to Abortion:Emergency Contraception in Oregon ERs, 2003 • 61% of Oregon hospitals routinely offer EC to rape patients • Catholic hospitals = non-Catholic hospitals • 46% of Oregon ERs discourage prescribing EC to non-rape patients • Catholic hospitals < non-Catholic hospitals

  39. EC and Oregon Pharmacies • 70% of all pharmacists surveyed reported that their pharmacy stocked emergency contraception. • Of those pharmacists who do not stock emergency contraception, 30% will not fill a prescription for the medication due a moral objection.

  40. Barriers to Abortion:Limits on Availability of Emergency Contraception • Public awareness low: • ¾ of reproductive-age women have not heard of EC • Advance access to EC does not promote risky sexual behavior • Congress has considered bills to prohibit the use of federal funds to prescribe, distribute, or provide emergency contraception to minors in elementary and secondary schools

  41. Barriers to Abortion:Limits on Availability of Emergency Contraception • Laws in Arkansas, Mississippi, Georgia, and South Dakota explicitly protect pharmacists who refuse to dispense EC • Other states are considering similar legislation • Wal-Mart offered EC as of 3/06, but does not require pharmacists to dispense it (guns, ammo, on the other hand…) • Military clinics not required to stock EC

  42. Barriers to Abortion:Mifepristone • Bush supports re-evaluation of FDA approval of mifepristone (RU-486, the “abortion pill”) • Approved for medical termination of pregnancies 49 days or less from LMP • Cost approx. $500

  43. Barriers to Abortion:Mifepristone • Medicaid funding for mifepristone restricted to cases of rape, incest, or to preserve the pregnant woman’s life • Proposed state and federal legislation to curtail availability of mifepristone and limit the number of doctors who can prescribe it • Alternative = Methotrexate termination, cost approx. $450

  44. The Black Market in Misoprostol (Cytotec) • 95% effective in conjunction with mifepristone • 85% effective alone • $2 per pill on black market • Use increasingly common among low income immigrants • Self-induced abortion illegal in 39 states

  45. Barriers to Abortion:Provider Availability • 87% of counties have no abortion provider • 30% of metropolitan areas have no provider • Situation worst in rural areas • 1800 physicians provide abortion services (↓ from 2400 in 1992) - 57% are aged 50 and older

  46. Barriers to Abortion:Provider Availability • Medical school training: • 17% no formal education • Clinical years: • 23% no formal education • 32% lecture • 45% third-year clinical experience (participation low) • ½ fourth-year reproductive health elective (participation low)

  47. Barriers to Abortion:Provider Availability • Provider training • 51% of Ob/Gyn residency programs houve routine training; 39% optional training • California law now requires all ob/gyn residency programs to comply with ACGME requirements, including training in abortion (with opt-out provision for conscientious objectors) • 44 states bar non-physicians from performing abortions

  48. Barriers to Abortion:Harassment of Patients and Providers • 55%-86% of providers harassed • 80,000 acts of violence and/or disruption at clinics in U.S. and Canada since 1977: • Including 7 murders, 17 attempted murders, 41 bombings, 166 arsons, 125 assaults, 654 anthrax threats (480 since 9/11/2001) • Abortioncam.com, Army of God, Nuremberg Files website (closed)

  49. Barriers to Abortion:Harassment of Patients and Providers • Scheidler v. National Organization for Women U.S. Supreme Court, 2/06) • Federal extortion and racketeering laws cannot be used to stop anti-choice extremists from obstructing access to clinics, trespassing on or damaging clinic property, or using violence or threats of violence against clinics, their employees, or their patients • 2007: Massachusetts enacts toughest restrictions in US on protestors at abortion clinics • Buffer zone = 35 feet

  50. Barriers to Abortion:Inflammatory Oratory • President Bush, declaring January 20, 2002 (20th anniversary of Roe v. Wade) “National Sanctity of Life Day,” likens abortion to terrorism: “On September 11, we clearly saw that evil exists in this world, and that it does not value life. Now we are engaged in a fight against evil and tyranny to preserve and protect life.”

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