Posted on 08/13/2014 7:30:55 AM PDT by wagglebee
A reader emailed me asking if we could do a piece on the oft-touted statistic that “1 in 3 women will have an abortion in her lifetime” (or “by age 45″). Happy to oblige. By the way, suggestions for blog topics are always welcome.
The pro-choice movement loves to use the 1-in-3 statistic, arguing that it “humanize[s] the issue.” (The irony of that statement does not escape me.) Of course, from a pro-life perspective, it matters little how many people have had an abortion; we know from history that large masses of people are capable of being very, tragically wrong.
The apparent message they’re trying to get acrossthat every third woman you see on the street has killed at least one embryo or fetus and therefore it must be totally okayis, let’s face it, not a logical argument by any stretch of the imagination. But as the pro-life movement gains ground, I’m sure abortion supporters find it comforting that they have some strength in numbers. There’s even a pro-choice book and campaign named after this statistic.
So I’m sure you’ll be shocked to learn that this statistic is complete hogwash. (That was sarcasm. If you really were shocked, you must be very new to the pro-life movement. Welcome aboard.)
The 1 in 3 campaign cites to a factsheet by the Guttmacher Institute, a pro-abortion think tank. That fact sheet, in turn, cites a 2011 study by Dr. Rachel Jones and Dr. Megan Kavanaugh, which is based on abortion data from 2000 to 2008. The Jones & Kavanaugh study states:
The cumulative first-abortion rate increases with age, and women aged 40 and older had a rate of 300.9 per 1,000 women. Put differently, an estimated 30.1% of women aged 1544 in 2008 will have an abortion by age 45 if exposed to prevailing abortion rates throughout their reproductive lives.
First of all, just in case the entire pro-choice movement missed out on third-grade math, 300.9 per 1,000 is not “1 in 3.” It’s basically 3 in 10, which is one in three-and-a-third. Their statistic is short a third of a person.
That’s assuming Jones & Kavanaugh’s numbers are reliable to begin with. The authors, to their credit, actually caution us that they may not be. Their method was to look at abortion rates within various demographic subgroups and then use that data to come up with an overall abortion rate. But (emphasis added):
Considering the substantial changes in abortion rates observed among young women, African American women, and poor women, abortion rates were calculated to determine potential interactions among these groups. Because some of these subgroups are relatively small and because the confidence intervals suggest some degree of inaccuracy, these findings are best interpreted as general patterns as opposed to precise measures.
Go tell that to the 1 in 3 campaign.
Click here to sign up for daily pro-life news alerts from LifeNews.com
Most important of all, however, is the fact that the 2011 study relied on old data. That isn’t Jones & Kavanaugh’s fault; abortion data is usually several years behind, whether you’re talking about Guttmacher or the CDC. But this is a major issue, because abortion rates have dropped drastically since 2008. In the three years between 2008 (when the study’s data set ended) and 2011 (when the study was published), the U.S. abortion rate dropped thirteen percent, to the lowest level since Roe v. Wade. And another three years have passed since then!1
At this point, there’s just no feasible way that the lifetime abortion rate is even close to 1 in 3. We should celebrate that today’s teenagers have much better things to look forward to than a one-in-three chance of being a party to an abortion.
Interestingly, the Jones & Kavanaugh study points out that an earlier study (in 1992) had predicted that a whopping 42% of women would have an abortion by age 45. The overly-enthusiastic abortion projection is not a new phenomenon.
1. For commentary about this in the context of abortion business closures, see When Access and Choice Collide. It’s hard to separate out how many closures can be attributed to the decline in business versus how many can be attributed to pro-life legislation.
LifeNews Note: Kelsey Hazzard is the head of Secular Pro-Life.
Since day one, Big Murder has tried to convince women that getting an abortion is just as normal as getting a haircut or a new outfit.
More like a segment of women will have multiple ones over their life.
Freepmail wagglebee to subscribe or unsubscribe from the moral absolutes ping list.
FreeRepublic moral absolutes keyword search
A guy I knew in the air force said his girl friend was getting one. It was the 10 abortion he had been part of with various girls.
I just have no words...
Some women have had 5-7 abortions. Just part of her birth control.
The abortion statistic is much like the divorce statistic. Yes, there are high numbers of both. However, those inclined to participate generate the bulk of them. In other words, if you are inclined toward abortion or dissolving a marriage, you are likely to do it more than once. On the other hand, if you are not so inclined, your likelihood of doing either is very small.
I’ve got news. One in three HAVE had abortions.
And tgey are depressed, confused, guilt ridden, have increased risk of breast cancer and have diss association issues
And they are in charge of Americas families child rearing and selection of electing government officials and policy decisions
Wrong. The same women keep having abortions over and over, it is their “fail-safe” form of birth control. The emotional need to submit to masculine attention (out of low self-esteem), rather than turning inward and becoming self-sufficient, causes these repeat and serial terminators of pregnancies (”It’s MY body!”) to think of themselves as “helpless victims”.
Sandra Fluke as an icon for the movement.
Oh, yeah. That too
The males For every abortion there’s one
And a guy who claims innocence due to not knowing has to live with himself, knowing that’s not logical or virtuous
These guys are part of we the people.
Anyone wanting to know what is wrong and where did this president come from can look at that for a big part of the explanation
I do not believe this. I am sure it is not something people generally share, but I am nearing 60, and have never known of anyone who has had one. And I do know MANY women who would never consider having one; of that I am certain.
Out of all the women I have known in my lifetime, I can count on my fingers the ones I’ve known who have had an abortion.
Granted I grew up in a heavily Catholic town.
I have known just one woman who has admitted to having an abortion and she went into depression over it.
There have been nearly fifty five million reported surgical abortions in the US since 1973. That’s about 1,300,000 per year
The CDC estimates the rate of abortions from abortifacient birth control pills to be much greater than that
Breast cancer incidence was one in eight in 1980 it’s now one in eight no change. We think its normal. No breast cancer was never one in eight. Abortion and the pill each are carcinogens in the same class as cigarettes.
No one talks about any of this. We deny it. And we want to deny it. Doctors don’t tell patients that BCPs cause abortion. They don’t talk about the cancer Neither does the pharmaceutical industry
And women certainly do not ever talk about their abortions
Ask any woman about her childbirth experience and you will have a story They will talk and with every detail. So it’s not that women don’t talk. It’s that they do not talk about abortion
now that 14 year-olds are popping Plan B One Step like Trayvon Martin popping skittles, 1:3 is probably more correct than incorrect.
Bad math.
The rate assumes each abortion is for another woman. But a lot of women have several abortions.
similar bad math is used to distort divorce data.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.