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Reducing the incidence of abortion

July 14, 2010

Reducing the Incidence of Abortion

Betsy Cairo, PhD, HCLD, CSE

When we speak of reproductive health education we focus on the tangible, the things that we hear and see in the news, on the internet and even in the lyrics of songs. These things we speak of are sex, pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases and broken relationships. We even hear about physical violence between partners. What we don’t hear about, what we never really focus on is the incidence  of abortion.

Pro-life advocates take the stance that to reduce the abortion rate one must not terminate an unintended and or unwanted pregnancy.  Take for instance Sharon Angle, the  Republican Senate candidate that was quoted on The Huffington Post as saying that a young girl raped by her father should know that “two wrongs don’t make a right.” Much good can come from a horrific situation like that, Angle added. Lemons can be made into lemonade.

Not sure how a young girl raped by her father who subsequently gets pregnant is “wrong” in terminating the pregnancy. In fact, terminating the pregnancy in this situation only takes out the added physical burden. The emotional burden will take a long time to heal and I am not talking about the emotional burden of terminating a pregnancy. I am talking about the emotional burden of being raped by her father. Nowhere in this interview does Sharon Angle speak of reducing the abortion rate by reducing the pregnancy rate. It is pretty common that the people who oppose comprehensive reproductive health education also oppose birth control and abortion. Too bad they can’t see that it doesn’t cut both ways.

To reduce the abortion rate we must reduce the unintended and or unwanted pregnancy rate. Most people believe that the abortion rate of an unintended pregnancy is about 50% or higher. In fact it is much lower than that. Most pregnancies that were unplanned go to term, additionally, a good percentage of pregnancies result in miscarriage leading to the actual number of aborted pregnancies  being rather low. But this is still not good enough.

So what is the problem? The problem is the point of focus. If we keep focusing on the incidence of teenage pregnancy we are treating the symptom and one of the treatments of the symptom (unplanned pregnancy) can be elective termination.  To me it is analogous to a recurring headache. You take a pain reliever and the head ache goes away but it will eventually return. You are simply treating the symptom. What should probably happen is for you to have a work up to make sure there isn’t something fundamentally wrong with your system. Essentially, to find the root of the cause of the headaches. In doing this, in finding the root of the cause of the problem you can then treat the problem and not the symptom.

For years we have been treating the symptom. The symptom in this case is unplanned pregnancies. It is time to treat the problem but do we even know what the problem is? As a person in education I of course have the bias that the problem is lack of information. While this is partially true it is not the entire picture. The entire picture not only consists of more accurate information for our youth but it of course has to be followed by access to care, hurdling religious and cultural influence and asking for accountability from our younger generation.

Accountability,  that is an interesting concept. In the generational attitude of “so what?” we have no accountability for the actions or the consequences. Cause and effect is completely lost. This is evidenced by the celebration of teen pregnancy. The cheerleader that gets pregnant as a freshman and stays on the cheer squad throughout high school only to parade her 3 year old out as a senior at every game in a matching outfit. Isn’t that cute? Wouldn’t every girl want to have that attention? The best part is that after the game the 3 year old goes home with grandma and grandpa while the cheerleader goes out with her friends. No accountability.

We want to reduce the teen pregnancy rate. We have organizations like The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy , Planned Parenthood, Advocates for Youth and SIECUS who work tirelessly to reach our youth to change these numbers. But we still need more. We need to figure out why what we are doing isn’t working.

We need to stop treating the symptom

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