Mental Health Implications of Abortion and Abortion Restriction: A Brief Narrative Review of U.S. Longitudinal Studies
Abstract
Methods
Results
Mental Health After Abortion
Study | Type | N | Design | Measures | Key findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Payne et al. (4) | Longitudinal prospective cohort study | 102 | Women were assessed before and 24 hours, 6 weeks, and 6 months after abortion by the same psychiatrist. | Anxiety, depression, anger, guilt, and shame assessed with the MMPI, POMS, and SRS. | Abortion did not appear to be a serious psychological trauma. Most women did not have prolonged emotional conflict following induced abortion. |
Major et al. (8) | Longitudinal prospective cohort study | 442 | Women with first-trimester unwanted pregnancies were surveyed 1 hour before abortion and 1 hour, 1 month, and 2 years after abortion. | Depression, PTSD, self-esteem, decision satisfaction, perceived harm and benefit, and positive and negative emotions assessed with the BSI, DSM-III-R, and Rosenberg Self-Esteem scale. | Depression decreased and self-esteem increased at 2 years after abortion, and negative emotions increased. Only 1% of women experienced PTSD, 72% were satisfied with their decision, 69% reported that they would have another abortion, and 72% reported more benefit than harm. |
Schmiege and Russo (7) | Longitudinal retrospective cohort study | 1,247 | U.S. National Longitudinal Survey of Youth included data from women who indicated outcomes of first pregnancy in 1984, followed by interviews that year and every 2 years after. | Depression assessed with the CES-D. | Rates of depression were similar between women with an unwanted first pregnancy who delivered and those who terminated their pregnancy. |
Hamama et al. (9) | Longitudinal retrospective cohort study | 1,581 | Psychobiology of PTSD and Adverse Outcomes of Childbearing study included prenatal structured telephone surveys of obstetric patients (including women at less than 28 weeks gestation) from three health systems in Midwestern states. | History of trauma, diagnosis of PTSD at the time of the early pregnancy, diagnosis of major depression in the past year, use of prayer, and demographic information. | Elective abortion or spontaneous abortion was not predictive of either PTSD or depression. Women’s labeling of their elective or spontaneous abortion experience as a “hard time” was related to trauma history and was a significant predictor of both PTSD and depression. |
Steinberg and Finer (5) | Longitudinal retrospective cohort study | 2,888 and 2,065 | The National Comorbidity Survey included data from structured psychiatric interviews administered to a nationally representative sample of the U.S. population. Two analyses were performed. | Mental health outcomes determined by DSM-III-R diagnoses with the CIDI; mental health outcomes grouped as mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders | The strongest predictor of mental health at interview was history of mental health problems or experience of violence. The only significant finding was that women who had multiple abortions were more likely to have a substance use disorder. |
Quinley et al. (3) | Longitudinal prospective cohort study | 62 | A needs assessment questionnaire was used to determine psychological coping scores before, immediately after, and 1–3 days after abortion. | Psychological coping outcomes | A statistically significant 44% improvement was found in reported psychological outcomes immediately after abortion when compared with psychological coping before the procedure. |
Gomez (6) | Longitudinal retrospective cohort study | 848 and 438 | The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health data included survey assessments of adolescents in an initial survey and in surveys 1 year, 5 years, and 11 years later. | Depression assessed with the CES-D, and self-esteem assessed with the Rosenberg Self-Esteem scale. | No relationship between having an abortion and subsequent depressive symptoms was found. The strongest indication of depressive symptoms was having depressive symptoms previously. |
Mental Health After Abortion Versus After Denial of Abortion
Study | Type | N | Design | Measures | Key findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Biggs et al. (11) | Longitudinal cohort study | 877 | The four groups of women were surveyed at baseline, 8 days after abortion, and semiannually for 3 years. | Professionally diagnosed anxiety or depressive disorder, including major depression, dysthymia, bipolar disorder, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anxiety disorder, and posttraumatic stress disorder | Self-reported anxiety was greater in the first-trimester abortion group, but no statistically significant difference in professionally diagnosed anxiety or depressive disorder was observed over 3 years. |
Biggs et al. (12) | Longitudinal cohort study | 877 | The four groups of women were surveyed at baseline, 8 days after abortion, and semiannually for 5 years. | Suicidality assessed with the BSI and the PHQ-9 | No statistically significant differences in suicidality between groups were observed over 5 years. |
Biggs et al. (10) | Longitudinal cohort study | 877 | The women were surveyed at baseline, 8 days after abortion, and semiannually for 5 years. | Depression and anxiety assessed with BSI subscales; self-esteem and life satisfaction assessed with questionnaires about well-being | Higher initial levels of anxiety and low self-esteem were observed in the two Turnaway groups. Over time, depressive and anxiety symptoms declined in all groups, except the Turnaway-birth group. |
Rocca et al. (13) | Longitudinal cohort study | 161 | Women who were denied abortions underwent 15 qualitative in-depth interviews 1 year after their abortion denial and semiannually for 5 years. | Positive and negative emotions, including relief, happiness, regret, guilt, sadness, and anger | Women who were denied abortions had greater negative emotions immediately after denial, but negative emotions decreased and positive emotions increased over time. |
Biggs et al. (14) | Longitudinal cohort study | 928 | Women were surveyed at baseline, 8 days after abortion, and semiannually for 5 years. | Perceived abortion stigma assessed through two questions, and psychological distress measured with the BSI depression and anxiety subscales | Perceived abortion stigma declined significantly in the Turnaway-births and near–gestational age-limit groups. Higher odds of psychological distress among those with high perceived abortion stigma was observed. |
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