Induced Abortion, Mortality, and the Conduct of Science

Abstract

There is no credible scientific opposition to the fact that a genetically distinct human life begins at conception and that an induced abortion is a death. Yet, abortion is not reported as a cause of death in the U.S. vital statistics system. Mortality patterns have profound implications for public policy. As a cause of death, we found abortion to be highly consequential, with large racial and ethnic disparities. Abortion represented 16.4% of non-Hispanic White deaths, but 61.1% and 64.0% of non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic deaths respectively. For Years of Potential Life Lost (YPLL), the ubiquitous measure of premature death, abortion accumulated 63.1% of non-Hispanic White YPLL and 86.5% and 87.4% of non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic YPLL respectively. Further, as measured by the availability of valid data and resources allocated for research, there is evidence that the science community is not appropriately engaged on this crucial public health problem.

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Studnicki, J. , MacKinnon, S. and Fisher, J. (2016) Induced Abortion, Mortality, and the Conduct of Science. Open Journal of Preventive Medicine, 6, 170-177. doi: 10.4236/ojpm.2016.66016.

Received 21 May 2016; accepted 14 June 2016; published 17 June 2016

1. Introduction

There is no credible scientific opposition to the fact that a new genetically distinct human organism begins with fertilization and that, simply stated, human life begins at conception. Nor is there dispute that, in the absence of induced abortion and with the exception of natural fetal losses, conception usually results in a live birth. A very recent statement from the White House clearly affirms “… the critical importance of a child’s first 1000 days after conception in determining a healthy and productive life trajectory, …” [1] . Further, while abortion remains a controversial and contentious issue in the United States, its staunchest advocates acknowledge that it results in a human death which must, nonetheless, be defined as morally permissible at any developmental stage [2] . Even the recent history of abortion related legal decisions has been consistent with science in affirming the unchanging identity of the child before and after the birth [3] . Many states now have laws protecting the life of the unborn without impeding the right to abortion [4] . The issue of legal abortion as a human death is, therefore, affirmed by science and accepted by partisans on all sides of the abortion debate.

Yet, despite the universal acknowledgement that the act of abortion results in a death, abortion is not reported as a cause of death in the vital statistics system in the United States. Nor is this exclusion limited to the United States. Although there are nearly 200 nations where the procedure is legal, and a conservatively estimated 45 - 50 million are performed annually worldwide, there is no country which considers induced abortion as a reportable death [5] [6] . This exclusion is especially critical in that fertility, mortality and migration are the principal determinants of population increases, decreases, and demographic composition in any nation [7] . Further, the influence of fertility has been mediated by improvements in contraceptive techniques and the increasing acceptance of abortion. In the United States, this combination of increased fertility rates and migration has resulted in the Hispanic ethnic group becoming the largest ethnic minority in the country, doubling the size of the Latino population between 1980 and 2000, and accounting for nearly half of the increase in the US population by 2006 [8] . Large racial and ethnic differences have been consistently observed in abortion rates for a number of years, and the overall incidence of the abortion procedure suggests that it is, in fact, a consequential influence on the size and composition of the U.S. population. Patterns of cause-specific mortality remain a major influence on public policy and resource allocation in the United States; and important previous research suggests that less attention is paid to causes of death which disproportionately affect racial and ethnic minorities [9] . Indeed, we already know that notions of changing mortality often reflect political ideologies and deeply held assumptions about the nature of society [10] . The exclusion of a major cause of death from the vital statistics system, especially one with large racial and ethnic disparities, should be a major concern to the scientific community and society as a whole. Therefore, we considered abortion as a cause of death in order to: 1) assess its magnitude against other major causes of death; 2) assess its contribution to years of potential life lost; and 3) compare its relative impact on these outcomes for the three major racial and ethnic groups in the United States: Hispanics and non-Hispanic Blacks (NHB) and Whites (NHW).

2. Methods

Counts of live births are provided by every state in the U.S. to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), through the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program of the National Vital Statistics System [11] . Estimates of induced abortions are collected by the CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Heath Promotion (NCCDPHP) from most states. These estimates are used to adjust the national totals from surveys of all known abortion providers administered by the Guttmacher Institute [12] . In order to accurately reflect fetal losses (intrauterine deaths) in the absence of induced abortion, our definition of fetal losses excluded those that occur prior to implantation and included all of those that might occur at all gestational ages; i.e., miscarriages and stillbirths. Intrauterine death estimates are derived from the pregnancy history data collected by the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), NCHS. The NSFG data include losses at all gestational points. Currently, there is no systematic reporting of natural fetal losses which precluded their inclusion as a cause of death in our analysis.

Death data is first reported on death certificates which are completed by funeral directors, attending physicians, medical examiners or coroners. Original records are filed in state registration offices and then compiled in a national database by the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program, CDC-NCHS. Causes of death are processed in accordance with the International Classification of Disease (ICD), Tenth Revision [13] .

The statistical construct of YPLL accumulates all the years between age at death and an index year (75 in our application) and aggregates them by cause of death. While YPLL is the most widely applied method for characterizing the burden of premature death, and has been included in the standard reports of the CDC since 1982, it has never been used to measure the burden of premature death from abortion for the entire U.S. [14] . Unadjusted YPLL rates are calculated using the resident population estimates of our three comparison groups as of July 2009 provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. In 2009, the NCHS replaced YPLL 65 with YPLL 75 to better repre- sent average U.S. longevity.

3. Results

In the U.S. in 2009, there were 6,369,000 pregnancies among women of all racial and ethnic origins. Hispanics, NHB and NHW together accounted for 93.2% of all pregnancies. Abortions terminated 11.9% of NHW pregnancies, 17.1% of Hispanic pregnancies, and 35.5% of NHB pregnancies. The ratio of live births to a single abortion for each group was: 5.8 for NHW; 3.9 for Hispanics; and 1.4 for NHB.

For all racial and ethnic origins, there were 3,589,163 deaths (Figure 1). Abortions accounted for only 16.4% of NHW deaths, but 61.1% and 64.0% of NHB and Hispanic deaths respectively. For NHW, diseases of the heart (20.8%) and malignant neoplasms (19.6%) each account for a higher percentage of deaths than do abortions. For Hispanics and NH Blacks, deaths from abortions are 4.2 and 3.5 times, respectively, the number of deaths from diseases of the heart and malignant neoplasms combined. Homicide was ranked in the top ten causes of death for Hispanics and NHB, but abortion deaths were 79.3 and 57.5 times, respectively, the number of homicides. Suicide was ranked in the top ten causes for NHW, but abortion deaths were 12.4 times the number of suicides.

Figure 1. Total deaths by cause, United States, 2009.

For NHW abortion represents 63.1% of YPLL 75 and a rate of 11,369 YPLL 75 per 100,000 population. For Hispanics and NHB respectively, the values were 87.4% and 31,969/100,000 and 86.5% and 67,490/ 100,000 (Figure 2). The all cause premature death rate for NHB is 4.3 times that of NHW and 2.1 times that of Hispanics. The abortion premature death rate for NHB is 5.9 times that of NHW and 2.1 times that of Hispanics.

4. Discussion

Abortion is undoubtedly the most demographically consequential cause of death for Hispanics and NHB. Yet, there is evidence that the scientific community is minimally engaged in informing effective public policy on the topic of abortion. Two important ways of gauging scientific engagement in any subject are the availability of consistently reported valid data and the allocation of sufficient resources for research. In the most recent CDC abortion surveillance report (2011 data published in 2014) three states (California, Maryland and New Hampshire) did not report, and the quality and timeliness of the reporting was uneven among states that did. The Guttmacher Institute, a private entity, has periodically surveyed all known abortion providers (16 times since 1973) and its abortion incidence data is widely considered the most reliable. For comparison purposes, the state reports compiled by the CDC capture only about 68% of the abortions reported by the Guttmacher surveys [15] . A recent Guttmacher policy review emphasizes the importance of valid data in addressing abortion as a public health problem with research into unintended pregnancies and the effectiveness of contraceptive methods. The same report calls for a coordinated federal and state effort to create and maintain a robust abortion reporting system that is “similar to the existing systems for other vital statistics, such as births and deaths” [16] . Of course, the logical and most cost-effective way to achieve that goal is to formally consider abortion as a reportable death.

Figure 2. YPLL by cause of death, United States, 2009.

Requested by the US Congress, and implemented in 2008, the Research, Condition and Disease Categorization (RCDC) system was developed by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to provide consistency and transparency in the reporting of its funded research. The system uses text data mining to cluster words or phrases, in conjunction with NIH expert definitions, to identify categories of funded research. A query of the system on November 6, 2015 returned a table with 244 Research/Disease Areas and their actual NIH funding for the fiscal years of 2011-2014, and estimated funding for years 2015 and 2016. Among these categories were all major diseases and causes of death and many others such as: Ataxia-Telangiectasia, Batten Disease, Charcot-Marie Tooth Disease, Climate Change, Human Fetal Tissue, Rural Heath, Stem Cell Research (Embryonic-Human), Vulvodynia, and Woman’s Health. Abortion is not one of the 244 categories. A second query specifically identifying abortion as the “Search Research/Disease Areas” term returned the following statement: “no estimates of funding information found which matched the criteria you specified.” In a related analysis utilizing data from the RCDC system, NIH researchers plotted the correlation between the number of deaths in 2010 attributed to a disease or condition category and the amount of NIH funding that it received. The objective of the analysis was to test the congruency between the societal burden of the disease/condition as measured by the number of deaths and the research resources allocated to it. As previously stated, abortion is not among the categories included in the analysis. However, the following categories were included: Malaria, Migraine, Depression, Autism, Infertility, Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD), Psoriasis, Macular Degeneration, Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease, and Headaches. For all US deaths in 2010, not a single death was attributed to any of these categories [17] .

5. Conclusion

The exclusion of abortion as a cause of death, in spite of conclusive science to contrary, and the relative paucity of information and funded research on a topic of demonstrated consequence to the demographic composition of the society, may be the ultimate example of science denial. An abortion death is deemed necessary and performed by other humans in a purposeful and completely legal process. In these respects an abortion is similar to capital punishment and subject to the same clash of varying religious, political and ideological values. The appropriate role of science is to inform this societal dialogue with objective information. Labeling abortion as a preventable death is not an argument for restricting access to a legal abortion. However, refusing to acknowledge abortion as a death undermines the role of science and the value of transparency so fundamental to a free society.

Supplementary

Table S1. Pregnancy outcomes: United States 2009, all, Hispanic, non-Hispanic Blacks and Whites, other.

aFetal loss rate = fetal losses/(live births + fetal losses).

Table S2. Calculation of years of potential lives lost (YPLL 75) due to abortion: United States 2009, all, Hispanic, non- Hispanic Blacks and Whites, other.

Table S3. Deaths (%): United States 2009, by major cause, all origins, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic Blacks and Whites.

Table S4. Years of potential life lost (YPLL) before age 75 (%): United States 2009, by major cause of death, all origins, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic Blacks and Whites.

aPer 100,000.

*Corresponding author.

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NOTES

*Corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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