Mental health consequences of abortion and refused abortion

Can J Psychiatry. 1980 Feb;25(1):68-73. doi: 10.1177/070674378002500113.

Abstract

PIP: There is no scientific evidence to support the hypothesis put forth by Dr. Philip Ney in a recent article published in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry that induced abortion is associated with an increase in child abuse. There are, however, numerous studies which support the contention that mandatory motherhood adversely affects the mental health of both the mother and the offspring. Studies conducted in Sweden, Scotland, and Czechoslovakia revealed that women who were refused abortions frequently experienced serious psychosocial difficulties for long periods of time following abortion refusal. Case controlled follow-up studies, conducted in Sweden and Czechoslovakia, of offspring born to women who were refused abortions demonstrated that a higher proportion of the unwanted children required psychiatric services, engaged in criminal behavior, and did less well in school than the controlled children. These studies have implications for the current Canadian law which permits a woman to obtain an abortion if pregnancy continuation will endanger her health. In view of the above statistical evidence, and the fact that mortality and morbidity are known to be lower for abortion than for childbirth, any person who denies a woman the right to have an abortion is increasing the risk that the health of the woman will be endangered. By law, therefore, all abortion requests should be honored.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Abortion Applicants / psychology*
  • Abortion, Legal / psychology*
  • Child Abuse
  • Child Development
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Parent-Child Relations
  • Pregnancy
  • Pregnancy, Unwanted
  • Social Adjustment