Abortion: Disturbing Numbers
The Edge ^ | December 2003 | Cathy Cleaver Ruse
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) published its latest survey on
abortion in the United States on the day after Thanksgiving. The
survey, reporting legal induced abortions obtained in the U.S. in the
year 2000, contains some eye-opening findings you will not likely
read in the mainstream press.
Keep in mind that the survey presents data which is voluntarily
reported by cities and states, the mechanisms by which cities and
states gather the data in the first place can vary widely, and some
states don't report at all. California, which in 1997 was responsible
for 23 percent of all abortions nationwide, decided in 1998 to remain
mum on abortion within its borders, as did New Hampshire and Alaska.
Since the CDC has no information from jurisdictions which together
account for nearly one-fourth of abortions nationwide, it is
impossible to have any real analysis of national trends. Still, the
publication gives a startling, if incomplete, picture of abortion in
the U.S. at the end of the last century, and is worth review. Some of
the findings include the following:
Women die from legal abortion. The survey reports that 14 women died
as a result of complications from known legal induced abortion in
1998 and 1999. Data on deaths from 2000 is not yet available. In
fact, from 1973 to 1999 at least 327 women have died from legal
induced abortion, according to the study.
Abortion rates change with race. In the areas for which race was
adequately reported, "the abortion rate for black women was 3.1 times
the rate for white women." In addition, "the abortion ratio for black
women (503 per 1,000 live births) was 3.0 times the ratio for white
women (167 per 1,000 live births)." This means that black babies are
aborted three times more frequently than white babies.
Multiple abortions are the norm, not the exception. According to the
survey, where the "number of previous abortions was adequately
reported," 53 percent of women had an abortion for the first time in
2000. That means 47 percent of women having abortions in 2000 were
not having their first abortion. How many abortions do women have?
The survey breaks it down by state, but stops counting at "three or
more previous legal induced abortions." In 2000, Maryland had the
highest percentage of women having their fourth (or more) abortion:
16.7 percent. New York City had the second highest ratio, with 14.7
percent of women having at least their fourth abortion in 2000.
The highest number of reported legal induced abortions in 2000
occurred in New York City: 94,466. Florida and Texas have the second
and third highest abortion numbers, 88,563 and 76,121 respectively.
California likely ranks among the top, but they won't tell.
What is lacking from the survey is any indication why these abortions
occurred. The report states simply that they were elective
procedures. The abortion lobby dismisses the question of why,
insisting that "who decides?" is all that matters. But "why" does
matter very much. Why did each of these women wake up one morning,
get into a car or a cab, and take that fateful drive? This is perhaps
the most important question of all.
The Edge ^ | December 2003 | Cathy Cleaver Ruse
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) published its latest survey on
abortion in the United States on the day after Thanksgiving. The
survey, reporting legal induced abortions obtained in the U.S. in the
year 2000, contains some eye-opening findings you will not likely
read in the mainstream press.
Keep in mind that the survey presents data which is voluntarily
reported by cities and states, the mechanisms by which cities and
states gather the data in the first place can vary widely, and some
states don't report at all. California, which in 1997 was responsible
for 23 percent of all abortions nationwide, decided in 1998 to remain
mum on abortion within its borders, as did New Hampshire and Alaska.
Since the CDC has no information from jurisdictions which together
account for nearly one-fourth of abortions nationwide, it is
impossible to have any real analysis of national trends. Still, the
publication gives a startling, if incomplete, picture of abortion in
the U.S. at the end of the last century, and is worth review. Some of
the findings include the following:
Women die from legal abortion. The survey reports that 14 women died
as a result of complications from known legal induced abortion in
1998 and 1999. Data on deaths from 2000 is not yet available. In
fact, from 1973 to 1999 at least 327 women have died from legal
induced abortion, according to the study.
Abortion rates change with race. In the areas for which race was
adequately reported, "the abortion rate for black women was 3.1 times
the rate for white women." In addition, "the abortion ratio for black
women (503 per 1,000 live births) was 3.0 times the ratio for white
women (167 per 1,000 live births)." This means that black babies are
aborted three times more frequently than white babies.
Multiple abortions are the norm, not the exception. According to the
survey, where the "number of previous abortions was adequately
reported," 53 percent of women had an abortion for the first time in
2000. That means 47 percent of women having abortions in 2000 were
not having their first abortion. How many abortions do women have?
The survey breaks it down by state, but stops counting at "three or
more previous legal induced abortions." In 2000, Maryland had the
highest percentage of women having their fourth (or more) abortion:
16.7 percent. New York City had the second highest ratio, with 14.7
percent of women having at least their fourth abortion in 2000.
The highest number of reported legal induced abortions in 2000
occurred in New York City: 94,466. Florida and Texas have the second
and third highest abortion numbers, 88,563 and 76,121 respectively.
California likely ranks among the top, but they won't tell.
What is lacking from the survey is any indication why these abortions
occurred. The report states simply that they were elective
procedures. The abortion lobby dismisses the question of why,
insisting that "who decides?" is all that matters. But "why" does
matter very much. Why did each of these women wake up one morning,
get into a car or a cab, and take that fateful drive? This is perhaps
the most important question of all.