Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Unsafe abortion

Unsafe abortion refers to the termination of a pregnancy by individuals lacking the requisite skills or in settings that fail to meet basic medical standards, resulting in elevated risks of severe complications and death. This practice accounts for approximately 45% of the world's 73 million annual induced abortions, with nearly all unsafe procedures occurring in developing regions where access to trained providers and hygienic facilities is limited. Primarily driven by unintended pregnancies amid inadequate contraception availability and legal restrictions, unsafe abortions frequently involve rudimentary methods such as ingestion of caustic substances, insertion of sharp objects, or unsterile instrumentation, precipitating immediate threats like hemorrhage, infection, and organ perforation. Globally, these procedures contribute to over 22,000 maternal deaths yearly and injure or disable around 7 million women, representing 8-11% of pregnancy-related fatalities, with mortality rates exceeding 200 per 100,000 cases in high-incidence areas compared to negligible risks from medically supervised abortions. Concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, where restrictive laws correlate with higher unsafe abortion proportions, the phenomenon underscores causal links between policy barriers, socioeconomic constraints, and preventable morbidity, though empirical evidence highlights contraception expansion as a more direct mitigant than procedural liberalization alone.

Definition and Classification

WHO and Medical Standards for Safety

The (WHO) defines an unsafe abortion as a procedure for terminating a performed by persons lacking the necessary skills or in an environment that does not conform to minimal medical standards, or both. This classification applies independently of , focusing solely on medical risk factors such as provider competence and procedural conditions. WHO emphasizes that unsafe contribute to preventable maternal deaths and morbidity through direct causal mechanisms, including hemorrhage, infection, and organ damage from unsterile or invasive interventions. Safe abortions, by contrast, adhere to evidence-based protocols recommended by WHO, including the use of methods appropriate to , performed by trained health professionals in settings equipped for sterile procedures and complication management. Essential criteria encompass pre-procedure assessment, access to recommended pharmaceuticals or instruments like devices, aseptic techniques to prevent , and post-procedure monitoring for complications such as incomplete expulsion or excessive bleeding. Mortality from safe abortions remains negligible, at less than 1 death per 100,000 procedures, reflecting the efficacy of these standards in minimizing risks when followed rigorously. WHO further delineates a spectrum of safety levels to quantify procedural risks empirically. "Safe" abortions involve trained providers using WHO-endorsed methods, yielding complication rates comparable to other outpatient procedures. "Less safe" abortions occur when skilled providers employ outdated techniques or untrained individuals use recommended methods, elevating risks due to suboptimal execution or monitoring. "Least safe" abortions, involving untrained persons with hazardous approaches like caustic substances or , result in the highest morbidity and mortality from , , or . This tiered framework underscores that deviations from medical standards—rather than intent or —drive adverse outcomes, with global data indicating that enhancing adherence to protocols could avert over 97% of unsafe abortion-related deaths in high-burden regions.

Distinction Between Unsafe, Illegal, and Self-Managed Abortions

Unsafe abortions are defined by the as procedures to terminate a performed by individuals lacking necessary skills or in settings that fail to meet minimal medical standards, irrespective of . This definition emphasizes procedural quality over legality, allowing for the possibility that illegal can adhere to safety protocols when conducted by trained providers using appropriate techniques in operations. Conversely, legal abortions can qualify as unsafe if performed negligently or without oversight, such as through inadequate facilities or untrained personnel. Historical evidence from the United States prior to Roe v. Wade illustrates this distinction, as networks like the Chicago-based Jane Collective provided an estimated 11,000 illegal abortions between 1969 and 1973 with no reported deaths, relying on self-taught medical techniques that evolved to include safer methods like dilation and curettage. National data further underscore that illegality did not inherently produce high mortality; Centers for Disease Control reports documented only 39 deaths from illegal abortions in 1972, amid an estimated hundreds of thousands of such procedures, suggesting many were executed competently despite prohibition. These outcomes indicate that unsafety arises primarily from deficits in expertise, equipment, or follow-up care rather than legal restrictions alone, which can sometimes foster discreet professional networks mitigating risks. Self-managed abortions, typically involving unassisted use of medications like obtained via or informal channels, often intersect with unsafe practices due to absence of clinical monitoring, increasing chances of incomplete expulsion or hemorrhage requiring intervention. Following the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson decision overturning , self-managed attempts in the U.S. rose, with surveys indicating a shift from 1.5% pre-Dobbs to higher rates in restrictive states, where individuals may misuse regimens—such as monotherapy, which has a 15-20% failure rate compared to combined mifepristone protocols—exacerbating complications from lack of confirmation or post-procedure evaluation. Factors like economic barriers and urgency drive these choices, but procedural flaws, not prohibition per se, underpin the attendant hazards.

Current Estimates and Regional Distribution

Global estimates indicate that approximately 73 million induced abortions occur annually worldwide, with around 45% classified as unsafe based on procedures lacking trained providers, proper , or medical standards. This equates to roughly 33 million unsafe abortions each year, predominantly in low- and middle-income countries where access to safe services is limited; however, these figures derive from modeling of 2010–2014 data and may underreport due to , illegality, and incomplete vital registration in restrictive settings. Unsafe abortions contribute to an estimated 22,800 maternal deaths annually, alongside 7 million cases of complications requiring treatment, though ranges vary due to data gaps and differing methodologies across sources. Regionally, 97% of unsafe abortions occur in developing areas, with experiencing the highest proportion at 77% of all abortions being unsafe, followed by high rates in and South/Southeast Asia. In contrast, unsafe abortions comprise less than 5% in and , where legal frameworks and healthcare infrastructure enable safer provision. Death rates from unsafe procedures exceed 200 per 100,000 cases in parts of and , compared to negligible risks from safe abortions globally. In the United States, following the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson decision overturning federal abortion protections, no surge in unsafe abortions has been documented; total abortions rose to an estimated 1.05 million in 2023 and 1.14 million in 2024, driven by increased medication abortion (63% of cases) and interstate travel to non-restrictive states. These trends reflect adaptations like rather than reversion to unsafe methods, though long-term data remain provisional amid varying state reporting.
Region% of Abortions UnsafeKey Notes
Sub-Saharan Africa77%Highest risk; models indicate persistent underreporting.
Latin America & Asia40–60%Majority in developing countries; 97% global unsafe total.
Europe/North America<5%Low due to access; U.S. totals stable/up post-restrictions.
The proportion of unsafe abortions worldwide declined following liberalizations in the , particularly in after the , where abortion rates fell significantly alongside improved access to contraception and safe procedures. In developed regions, overall abortion incidence dropped by about 43% from 1990 to 2014, with unsafe procedures becoming rare due to regulatory expansions and medical advancements. However, in low- and middle-income countries, where restrictions remain common, unsafe abortions have stagnated at high levels, comprising 45% of all procedures annually between 2010 and 2014—equating to 25 million cases, nearly all in developing regions—and similar estimates persist into the amid limited progress in service quality and access.31794-4/fulltext) Recent policy shifts in restrictive environments have not produced the surges in clandestine, high-risk procedures assumed under stringent laws. In U.S. states enacting near-total bans after the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision, births rose by an average of 2.3% relative to pre-ban trends through mid-2023, reflecting reduced abortion access without corresponding evidence of pre-Roe v. Wade-era "back-alley" revivals, as self-managed and interstate options predominate. Globally, unsafe rates endure in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia, where 77% of procedures in Africa alone were unsafe as of 2010–2014, driven by enforcement gaps rather than outright inevitability. Positive developments include Nigeria's June 2025 Federal High Court ruling, which affirmed the right to safe abortion for survivors of , potentially expanding access in a country with historically high unsafe rates. Yet empirical data underscore that legalization alone does not eradicate risks; in settings like post-1971 reforms, unsafe abortions persist due to inadequate facilities, contributing to 8–11% of global maternal deaths from such procedures even where broadly permitted. 30624-X/fulltext) This highlights access barriers as a key causal factor beyond mere legality.

Historical Context

Ancient and Pre-Modern Practices

In , the from approximately 1550 BCE documents early attempts at induced abortion through vaginal suppositories made from plant fibers mixed with honey, dates, and other substances intended to provoke contractions or expulsion of the . These methods, lacking sterile techniques or pharmacological precision, carried inherent risks of , hemorrhage, and incomplete procedures leading to maternal death, as the abrasive insertions often damaged tissues without reliable efficacy. Greek medical texts from the 5th century BCE, including those attributed to , reference pessaries—vaginal inserts of herbs like or —to terminate pregnancies, though the generally discouraged such interventions except in dire cases due to observed dangers. , a 2nd-century , detailed techniques such as vigorous jumping, carriage rides over rough terrain, or herbal enemas and potions using rue or savin to induce , primarily for women with contraindications to , but emphasized the frequent failures and toxicities resulting in convulsions, gastrointestinal damage, or fatalities from overdose. practices mirrored these, incorporating physical trauma like hot baths followed by sudden cooling or abdominal bindings, which compounded risks through or absent any knowledge. Across these civilizations, abortion attempts were driven by social pressures from unwanted pregnancies in contexts without reliable contraception or , persisting despite philosophical debates—such as Plato's conditional in Republic for —without regulatory frameworks to enforce safer alternatives, rendering all methods intrinsically unsafe. abortifacients like , harvested to extinction by demand in the Mediterranean by the 1st century CE, exemplify the empirical trial-and-error approach, where efficacy varied but poisoning from unstandardized doses was common. In pre-modern and through the medieval and early modern periods, these practices evolved minimally, relying on inherited lore—such as pennyroyal teas or lead-based potions documented in 16th-century herbals—alongside crude instruments like sharpened feathers or knitting needles for mechanical dilation, yielding high complication rates from and blood loss before germ theory or . Empirical accounts from surgical texts, like those of in the 16th century, note frequent maternal mortality, underscoring that procedural risks stemmed from biological realities of and rather than , setting precedents for industrial-era refinements in tools that still lagged behind aseptic standards.

20th Century Developments in Restrictive Regimes

In the , the 1936 ban on abortion—except in cases threatening the mother's life—drove a sharp rise in illegal procedures, with women turning to self-induction methods such as douching with soapy water or seeking underground practitioners who used rudimentary instruments. This , reversed in 1955 amid widespread clandestine activity, highlighted how legal restrictions in resource-poor settings amplified reliance on unsterile, untrained interventions rather than eliminating demand. Romania's of 1966, enacted under to boost population growth, effectively prohibited abortion and contraception except under narrow exceptions, spurring extensive clandestine networks where women self-administered physical methods like inserting knitting needles or crochet hooks, or accessed informal providers in hidden clinics. These practices persisted due to systemic scarcity of alternatives, including limited contraception and healthcare , underscoring that bans in authoritarian contexts channeled abortions into unregulated, poverty-driven channels without substantially curbing incidence. In , prior to the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act of , abortion was criminalized under the except to save the woman's life, resulting in prevalent self-managed attempts or procedures by unqualified (traditional birth attendants) using herbs, sticks, or caustic substances amid widespread and low contraceptive availability. The legalization targeted this underground persistence by permitting terminations up to 20 weeks under medical supervision, yet unsafe methods lingered in underserved areas, illustrating how legal barriers intersected with economic constraints to sustain hidden practices. Across Latin American countries with 20th-century prohibitions, such as and , strict penal codes fostered resilient clandestine networks of lay providers who employed invasive techniques like manual with makeshift tools or chemical insertions, often operating as "public secrets" in urban and rural settings where formal healthcare was inaccessible to the poor. Empirical analyses indicate that such restrictive frameworks correlated with concealed abortions but did not markedly lower overall rates compared to permissive regimes, as incidence remained driven more by unmet contraceptive needs and socioeconomic factors than by alone.31794-4/fulltext)

Legalization Impacts: Pre- and Post-Roe v. Wade in the U.S.

Prior to the 1973 decision, illegal abortions in the United States were commonly performed by untrained practitioners or through self-administered methods, contributing to significant mortality. In 1972, the last full year before legalization, there were 39 reported deaths from illegal abortions, accounting for a substantial portion of the 90 total abortion-related deaths that year. These deaths often resulted from septic procedures, hemorrhage, or infections due to rudimentary techniques like insertion of foreign objects or caustic substances by amateurs. The ruling on January 22, 1973, established a to , enabling regulated procedures by licensed providers and markedly reducing abortion-related risks. Illegal abortion deaths dropped sharply to 19 in 1973 and reached single digits by the mid-1970s, with only two reported in 1976; overall abortion mortality fell from 39 per 100,000 legal procedures pre-legalization to under 1 per 100,000 by the 1980s. Legal access shifted most abortions to clinical settings with sterile equipment and medical oversight, minimizing unsafe practices, though marginal self-induced attempts persisted at low levels—estimated at a 7% lifetime by 2017, often involving over-the-counter medications rather than highly dangerous methods. The Supreme Court's Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision on June 24, 2022, overturned Roe, returning regulation to the states and prompting near-total bans in 14 states by mid-2023. Contrary to predictions of a return to pre-Roe dangers, national numbers rose, reaching an estimated 1.04 million clinician-provided procedures in 2024, up from pre-Dobbs trends, facilitated by medication (63% of totals in 2023, often via ) and interstate travel. Self-managed attempts increased post-Dobbs, with use for this purpose nearly doubling to 11% of by 2023, but these were largely non-clinic based yet sourced through legal or gray-market channels, showing no empirical surge in severe complications or deaths akin to pre-Roe levels. Maternal mortality data post-Dobbs indicate stability or declines in ban states, with one reporting a 21% drop in 2023 compared to pre-Dobbs expectations, outpacing the national 16% decline, amid no documented spike in illegal fatalities per CDC surveillance. While some studies link bans to rises in (e.g., 5.6% higher than expected in ban states through 2023) or specific pregnancy-related deaths, these are attributed more to overall birth increases than unsafe abortions, with travel and mitigating access barriers and challenging forecasts of widespread peril.

Methods and Techniques

Physical and Invasive Procedures

Physical and invasive procedures in unsafe abortions encompass manual techniques aimed at mechanically disrupting the , primarily through trans-cervical insertion of improvised sharp or rigid objects to rupture the or induce fetal expulsion without pharmacological aid. These methods, such as using unbent wire coat hangers, knitting needles, sticks, roots, or bicycle spokes, involve forcing the object through the undilated into the to cause , relying on blunt or laceration to interrupt . Medically, they fail because the implements lack the precision, flexibility, and controlled depth of suction curettage tools, often resulting in erratic tissue damage that does not systematically evacuate uterine contents while introducing uncontrolled variables like variable object rigidity and absent sterile fields. Untrained approximations of further illustrate procedural inadequacy, where providers manually dilate the using makeshift dilators before scraping the with crude instruments like sharpened sticks or non-sterile curettes, absent , verification, or hemodynamic monitoring. This deviates from safe standards requiring graduated dilators and , as the forceful, unguided manipulation disrupts without complete removal, perpetuating incomplete gestation due to inadequate access to deeper chorionic attachments. In pre-Roe v. Wade (prior to 1973), self-induced cases documented coat hanger insertions as desperate responses to legal restrictions, with medical records noting attempts via cervical os penetration over days preceding hospitalization. Persisting in amid access barriers, such insertions of sharp objects like twigs or herbs occur frequently, as reported in clinical ethnographies of clandestine practices in regions like and .

Chemical and Pharmacological Attempts

In historical contexts, women in restrictive environments have resorted to ingesting toxic substances in attempts to induce abortion, often with severe consequences including organ failure and death. Herbs such as were employed for their purported effects, but pennyroyal oil contains pulegone, a hepatotoxin that can cause acute liver damage, seizures, and multi-organ failure upon ingestion. Similarly, teas, used traditionally as , lead to , gastrointestinal hemorrhage, and renal toxicity at doses exceeding therapeutic levels. Ancient accounts reference , a now-extinct from Cyrene, valued for contraceptive and properties due to its apiol content, though overharvesting contributed to its disappearance by the first century AD; modern analogs like or other apiaceous herbs carry risks of allergic reactions and incomplete efficacy. Non-botanical toxins, including , , and mixtures involving or , were ingested to provoke or systemic , frequently resulting in , chemical burns to the , and hemorrhagic complications from . These methods exhibited low success rates, often below 20%, with failure leading to continued or exacerbated maternal morbidity. In contemporary restrictive regimes, pharmacological attempts primarily involve , a analog originally developed for gastric ulcers but repurposed off-label for abortion induction. When used alone without , misoprostol's efficacy drops to 72-94% for first-trimester expulsions, compared to over 95% in combination regimens, increasing risks of incomplete abortion requiring surgical intervention in up to 20-30% of cases. Self-administration via telehealth-sourced pills or black-market acquisition often entails improper dosing—such as oral or vaginal regimens without confirmation of —leading to prolonged bleeding, infection from retained , and hemorrhage necessitating transfusion. In regions like and , where legal barriers persist, misoprostol-only attempts constitute a growing share of self-managed abortions, comprising up to 50% of clandestine procedures in some countries, though they have partially displaced more invasive methods; however, incomplete expulsions account for 10-15% of subsequent emergency visits. Overdosage exacerbates prostaglandin-mediated side effects, including severe cramping, , and cardiovascular instability, with rare but documented cases of in advanced gestations. These ingestion-based approaches remain prevalent in low-resource, restrictive settings, where approximately 97% of the estimated 25 million annual unsafe abortions occur in developing regions, driven by limited access to supervised care. Empirical data indicate failure rates exceeding 50% for non-pharmacological toxins and herbs, often necessitating emergency interventions for or , underscoring their inefficiency and high complication profile relative to regulated protocols. Poisoning from such attempts contributes to 5-10% of unsafe abortion-related deaths globally, per forensic analyses in high-burden areas.

Self-Induced and Untrained Provider Methods

Self-induced abortion methods typically involve desperate, non-medical attempts to terminate without professional oversight, such as ingesting caustic substances, inserting sharp or foreign objects into the or , or applying physical like jumping from heights, heavy lifting, or prolonged hot baths to induce . These approaches stem from first-principles causation where unsterile interventions or blunt force disrupt but frequently cause incomplete expulsion, leading to retained tissue and . Empirical data indicate such methods carry elevated risks of hemorrhage, , organ , and , with historical cases showing mortality rates far exceeding regulated procedures due to lack of post-intervention care. Untrained providers, often operating in clandestine settings, exacerbate dangers by employing outdated or improvised tools like knitting needles, herbal concoctions, or unregulated chemicals without sterile conditions or dosage knowledge, distinguishing these from skilled illegal practitioners using modern equipment.31794-4/fulltext) According to classifications, abortions by untrained individuals using invasive or hazardous techniques qualify as "least safe," comprising approximately one-third of all global unsafe abortions and associated with the highest complication rates, including and toxic shock. In regions with legal restrictions or poor enforcement, such as parts of or post-Dobbs United States states, women may resort to these due to access barriers, with reports of increased self-attempts via unregulated online kits potentially involving drugs or incorrect regimens heightening failure and injury risks. Causal analysis reveals that the absence of amplifies errors in timing, depth of , or of complications, as untrained actors cannot assess or contraindications, leading to disproportionate harm in early-term attempts where misjudged force causes cervical tears. Peer-reviewed scrutiny notes that while some self-managed pharmacological attempts with verified yield low serious adverse events (under 1%), amateur physical or untrained invasive methods consistently report higher empirical burdens, including 15% requiring emergency in recent U.S. surveys post-restrictive laws. These practices persist in legal vacuums, driven by enforcement gaps rather than , underscoring the empirical primacy of skill and sterility over intent.

Health Risks and Complications

Immediate Physical Dangers

Unsafe abortions, defined as those performed by untrained individuals or in environments lacking medical standards, carry acute risks primarily from procedural , , and incomplete evacuation. Hemorrhage arises when providers fail to fully remove fetal and placental , leading to ongoing uterine bleeding that can rapidly become life-threatening without prompt intervention. develops due to bacterial introduction from unsterile instruments or hands, progressing from to systemic infection if retained products provide a nidus for pathogens. Organ perforation, including or bowel , occurs from the use of sharp or improvised tools by unskilled practitioners, disrupting vascular and structural integrity. These dangers stem causally from the absence of sterile techniques and provider expertise; for instance, insertion of foreign objects or substances not only risks direct but also induces chemical , manifesting as organ failure from . In contrast, safe abortions using methods like by trained personnel exhibit major complication rates below 0.2%, attributable to controlled instrumentation and aseptic protocols that minimize trauma and contamination. Empirical data from high-unsafe regions indicate that such immediate complications necessitate hospitalization in up to 5 million cases annually among survivors, underscoring the procedural failures inherent to untrained execution. Factors exacerbating these risks include the employment of invasive, non-medical methods—such as manual dilation with household items—which heighten likelihood, and the omission of or , which delays recognition of vascular injury. Peer-reviewed analyses confirm that unsafe procedures' complication profiles differ fundamentally from regulated ones, with infection rates elevated by orders of magnitude due to unaddressed microbial exposure.

Mortality Rates and Empirical Data Scrutiny

The (WHO) estimates that approximately 39,000 women die annually from unsafe abortions, primarily in developing regions where access to legal procedures is limited. These figures, derived from modeling and hospital-based data in collaboration with the —an organization with advocacy ties to abortion rights—have faced scrutiny for potential overestimation due to challenges in attributing causes of death, incomplete reporting from rural or clandestine settings, and reliance on extrapolations rather than direct counts. Independent analyses, including those from pro-life researchers, argue that global unsafe abortion mortality is exaggerated to bolster arguments for liberalization, pointing to inconsistencies where reported deaths do not align with verifiable or declines attributable to general medical advancements like antibiotics rather than policy changes. In the United States prior to in 1973, empirical data indicate that deaths from illegal abortions were far lower than commonly mythologized figures of thousands annually; by 1965, official counts reported fewer than 200 such deaths, representing about 17% of maternal mortality at the time, with further reductions linked to penicillin's introduction in the rather than widespread illegal procedures. These numbers, drawn from vital and hospital reports, reflect underreporting of self-induced or non-fatal attempts but also highlight that most illegal abortions were performed by physicians in clinical settings, mitigating lethality compared to portrayals of rampant "back-alley" dangers. Following the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision, which returned regulation to states, no verifiable surge in unsafe abortion mortality has materialized in restrictive states, as evidenced by CDC surveillance data showing only five abortion-related deaths nationwide in 2021—the latest fully reviewed year—and overall maternal mortality declining 21% in ban states post-Dobbs, outpacing the national 16% drop. Claims of rising deaths in some studies are contradicted by comprehensive datasets from the CDC and analyses finding no significant changes in maternal morbidity or pregnancy-related fatalities attributable to restrictions, with potential undercounting of self-resolved cases further complicating interpretations. Pro-life critiques emphasize that facility-centric reporting misses undetected or non-medical attempts, suggesting persistent advocacy-driven inflation of risks to influence policy.

Long-Term Health Impacts

Unsafe abortions, characterized by procedures performed by untrained individuals or in substandard conditions, are associated with chronic reproductive complications, including due to uterine scarring () or (PID) resulting from untreated s. A in low-resource settings found that women undergoing unsafe procedures had a significantly elevated of secondary , with PID sequelae affecting up to 20-50% of cases involving or . These outcomes stem causally from incomplete expulsion of fetal tissue leading to bacterial ascension and endometrial damage, distinct from rare occurrences in regulated medical abortions where rates are below 1%. Chronic represents another persistent effect, often linked to adhesions or tubal occlusion following instrumental or chemical irritation in self-induced attempts. Longitudinal data from regions with high unsafe abortion prevalence indicate that 10-15% of survivors develop debilitating persisting beyond six months, correlating with higher rates of and tubo-ovarian abscesses. Globally, unsafe abortions contribute to approximately 7 million annual cases of injury or among women and girls, encompassing these chronic conditions and exacerbating socioeconomic vulnerabilities like that limit follow-up care. Medication misuse in unsupervised contexts heightens risks of overlooked ectopic pregnancies or retained products, fostering long-term gynecological morbidity such as recurrent miscarriages or heightened ectopic incidence in subsequent gestations. Evidence from epidemiological reviews attributes these to diagnostic delays and incomplete pharmacological efficacy, with odds ratios for rising 2-3 fold post-unsafe intervention compared to baseline. Psychological sequelae, including elevated anxiety or post-traumatic stress, arise primarily from procedural complications rather than the act itself, with studies noting higher symptom persistence in unsafe cases due to physical and . These effects are mitigated in safe settings, underscoring illegality's role in amplifying harm through substandard methods, though confounders like preexisting burdens require cautious interpretation of observational data.

Treatment and Management

Medical Interventions for Complications

Medical interventions for complications arising from unsafe abortions prioritize rapid stabilization, evacuation of retained products of conception, and targeted therapy to mitigate risks such as hemorrhage, infection, and organ perforation. Standard protocols emphasize uterine evacuation via manual vacuum aspiration (MVA) or dilation and curettage (D&C) for incomplete abortions, combined with broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics for sepsis, which together form the cornerstone of treatment. Uterotonics like oxytocin or misoprostol are administered to control postpartum hemorrhage by promoting uterine contraction, often alongside fluid resuscitation and, in severe cases, blood transfusion or tranexamic acid to reduce blood loss. The World Health Organization's 2022 abortion care guidelines outline a comprehensive post-abortion care framework, recommending essential interventions including , anti-infective therapy, and surgical repair for , which may require or to address bowel or vascular injury. For pharmacological abortion failures leading to incomplete expulsion, facilitates expulsion of retained tissue with success rates exceeding 94% when administered timely in clinical settings. Prompt access to these resource-intensive measures—necessitating skilled personnel, imaging, operating theaters, and blood banks—dramatically lowers mortality, with treated complications showing resolution rates of 94-97% in first-trimester cases compared to untreated unsafe procedures carrying 4.7-13.2% fatality risks. In the United States following the June 24, 2022, decision in Dobbs v. , federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) mandates stabilization for life-threatening abortion-related complications, such as hemorrhage or from self-managed pill regimens, overriding state bans in emergent scenarios. However, documented hesitancy among providers due to legal ambiguities has resulted in treatment delays, as seen in a 2024 case where incomplete expulsion after medication abortion led to preventable from untreated hemorrhage. Interventions remain effective when unhindered, underscoring the causal role of expeditious care in averting sequelae regardless of procedural legality.

Challenges in Low-Resource Settings

In low-resource settings, particularly in and south-central , women experiencing complications from unsafe abortions often face significant delays in accessing post-abortion care due to , geographic isolation, and financial constraints. Stigma surrounding abortion leads to hesitation in seeking timely medical help, exacerbating risks of hemorrhage, , and organ damage, as women may prioritize secrecy over immediate treatment. Rural areas compound these issues with long travel distances to facilities, inadequate transportation, and limited availability of emergency services, resulting in higher complication severity upon arrival. Health facilities in these regions are frequently overwhelmed, with an estimated 5 million women hospitalized annually worldwide for abortion-related complications such as hemorrhage and , the majority in developing countries lacking sufficient beds, staff, or equipment. In , where unsafe abortions account for up to 13.2% of maternal deaths in some estimates, referral hospitals report high volumes of severe cases, including those from conflict zones, straining resources and leading to poorer outcomes. , particularly south and central regions, sees over half of global unsafe abortions, with similar facility overload contributing to untreated complications that elevate mortality risks. Empirical data on these challenges reveal gaps, especially in rural locales where underreporting of complications distorts severity estimates and hinders ; for instance, rural face 17% higher odds of unsafe procedures compared to urban counterparts, yet comprehensive tracking remains sparse due to decentralized and cultural barriers to disclosure. This contrasts sharply with developed settings, where prompt access to advanced interventions reduces complication fatality to near negligible levels, underscoring how resource scarcity causally amplifies morbidity from untreated cases rather than the procedures themselves. Provider shortages and negative attitudes further impede , as untrained staff or refusals based on moral objections delay essential stabilization.

Debates and Perspectives

Conflation of Illegality with Unsafety

A prevalent assertion in debates on posits that legal restrictions directly precipitate spikes in unsafe procedures, implying that inherently eliminates such risks. This view overlooks that unsafety arises from multifaceted causes beyond mere , including inadequate to trained providers, socioeconomic barriers, and individual choices for self-induction, which persist irrespective of . For instance, in nations where is broadly legal, a significant minority of procedures remain unsafe due to gaps in service availability or patient preferences for unregulated methods.31794-4/fulltext) Empirical data from the post the 2022 Dobbs v. decision illustrates this persistence, as restrictions in certain states correlated with increased self-managed abortions rather than a wholesale shift to illegality-driven peril. Surveys indicate that the proportion of reproductive-aged women reporting attempts at self-induced termination rose from approximately 5% pre-Dobbs to 7% lifetime thereafter, with 3.4% attempting in the year following the ruling, often via medication sourced online or otherwise without clinical oversight. Such self-managed efforts, while sometimes effective, carry elevated risks of complications like incomplete expulsion or hemorrhage when lacking medical follow-up, demonstrating that legal barriers do not monopolize unsafety causation. Proponents of restrictions counter that conflating illegality with inherent unsafety ignores the net reduction in total abortions achieved through policy limits, thereby diminishing aggregate harm since every procedure entails some risk profile. Pre-Roe v. Wade (1973), official estimates placed annual deaths from illegal abortions at around 200–250 in the U.S., a figure dwarfed by contemporaneous childbirth mortality and not indicative of widespread danger, as improved sanitation and antibiotics had already curtailed earlier 20th-century excesses. This perspective emphasizes causal realism: fewer induced terminations overall equate to fewer opportunities for adverse outcomes, legal or otherwise, challenging narratives that equate with inevitable peril spikes. Global patterns reinforce that unsafety correlates more strongly with development levels than legality alone; while the reports higher unsafe proportions in highly restrictive regimes (up to 90% in some), even permissive jurisdictions experience unsafe rates exceeding zero due to rural-urban divides or cultural stigmas impeding formal care. In developing countries with liberal laws, such as , complications from unsafe abortions remain elevated despite permissive frameworks, underscoring access and training deficits as primary drivers over statutory prohibitions. Thus, policy discourse benefits from disaggregating legality from safety determinants to avoid overstated causal linkages.

Reliability and Biases in Reporting Data

Estimates of unsafe abortions produced by organizations such as the (WHO) and the often rely on statistical modeling and extrapolations from limited empirical data, particularly in regions with restrictive laws where direct reporting is scarce or stigmatized.31794-4/fulltext) These methods incorporate assumptions about abortion incidence, complication rates, and classification of "unsafe" procedures, which critics argue can lead to inflated figures; for instance, analyses have challenged Guttmacher's country-level estimates as potentially overestimating abortions by factors of up to 10 in specific cases like , due to reliance on indirect indicators rather than comprehensive facility records. Such modeling introduces uncertainty, as it may underemphasize variations in provider skill or hygiene that allow some illegal abortions to occur safely, thereby skewing global tallies toward higher unsafe rates. Reporting biases are evident in the advocacy orientations of key sources; the , while recognized for data collection efforts, functions as a advocate, which has prompted over whether its methodologies prioritize empirical precision or , as seen in responses to external validations causal links between restrictions and mortality spikes. Similarly, left-leaning media outlets amplified predictions of widespread unsafe abortions following the 2022 Dobbs v. decision, forecasting surges in maternal harm from travel barriers and self-managed attempts, yet 2024 analyses indicate no corresponding rise in maternal mortality in states with bans—in fact, rates declined by 21% in those jurisdictions, contrasting with modeled projections of up to 24% increases. This discrepancy highlights systemic tendencies in and mainstream reporting to favor extrapolative warnings over facility-sourced or longitudinal data, potentially amplifying perceptions of risk to bolster arguments for liberalization. Facility-based reporting and direct complication offer higher reliability than aggregate models, as evidenced by CDC data, which flags uncertainties in self-reported gestational ages and underreporting but provides verifiable counts from licensed providers. Peer-reviewed studies emphasize the need for standardized metrics in facilities to minimize biases from social desirability or legal fears, which can lead to underreporting of both induced abortions and their outcomes. Prioritizing such empirical, ground-level data—supplemented by linked medical records to correct underreporting—over broad extrapolations would enhance accuracy, particularly in distinguishing truly hazardous self-induced methods from skilled informal practices. Multiple corroborating sources for controversial metrics, including pro-life analyses debunking overstated pre-Dobbs era dangers, further underscore the value of cross-verifying advocacy-driven estimates against primary health records.

Pro-Life and Pro-Choice Viewpoints on Causation and Solutions

Pro-choice advocates maintain that restrictive abortion laws are the principal driver of unsafe abortions, as they force women into desperate, unregulated methods lacking medical oversight, such as self-induced procedures or unqualified providers. Organizations like the and assert that nearly all such incidents—estimated at 25 million annually, or 45% of global s between 2010 and 2014—are preventable through , with solutions centering on universal access to regulated, to supplant clandestine practices. They argue that empirical correlations between legal prohibitions and higher unsafe abortion rates in developing countries demonstrate , dismissing alternatives as insufficient to address demand rooted in unintended pregnancies. Pro-life viewpoints, conversely, identify the procedure's intrinsic physiological risks—evident even in legal settings, with documented complications like hemorrhage and —as a core causal factor, exacerbated by cultural normalization of that undermines ethical deterrents and family support structures. Rather than , they advocate multifaceted solutions including gestational limits, mandatory counseling, enhanced incentives, contraception education, and resource networks, which data from U.S. states with targeted restrictions show reduce overall volumes by 0.74 to 1.10 per 1,000 women aged 15-44 without precipitating surges in maternal harm. Pro-life analyses emphasize that total bans in nations like correlate with stable or declining maternal mortality ratios when adjusted for broader healthcare improvements, countering narratives of inevitable unsafe booms by highlighting poverty and limited ethics as persistent drivers over legality alone. Interpretations of shared data diverge sharply: pro-choice sources like WHO equate illegality with unsafety, projecting higher morbidity in restrictive regimes based on modeled extrapolations from admissions for complications. Pro-life critiques, including those from reviews, question this for over-relying on assumptions that conflate all induced abortions in low-reporting areas as unsafe, ignoring undercounted legal risks and evidence from where pre-liberalization maternal deaths remained low (e.g., under 5 per 100,000 in Ireland and historically). Post-restriction trends in since 2020, for instance, show no verifiable spike in abortion-related mortality despite claims of clandestine shifts, underscoring debates over amid institutional biases favoring liberalization narratives.

Policy and Prevention Strategies

Legal restrictions on abortion correlate with fewer procedures overall in implementing jurisdictions. After the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision, states enforcing bans saw births rise by an average of 2.3% relative to projections absent such policies, based on analyses of fertility data from 2022–2023. This outcome reflects reduced local abortions, though many residents accessed services via travel to permissive states or telehealth, mitigating but not eliminating access barriers. Empirical evidence for surges in unsafe abortions post-Dobbs is preliminary and shows no immediate national spike in maternal mortality; for instance, some state-level data indicate maternal death rates declined in ban states by up to 21% in the initial post-decision period, potentially due to shifts toward monitored care or underreporting dynamics. Travel demands, however, imposed documented logistical and financial strains, with interstate crossings for abortions increasing substantially. Liberalization efforts have reduced the share of unsafe abortions in specific contexts by enabling regulated access. In the U.S., the 1973 ruling coincided with a 30–40% drop in abortion-related maternal mortality rates, especially among racial minorities, as procedures transitioned to clinical settings. Globally, unsafe abortions have hovered at approximately 45% of all procedures, with an estimated 25 million occurring annually from 2010–2014 per WHO estimates, suggesting liberalization curbs relative risks but does not eradicate them amid ongoing demand. India's 1971 Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act legalized abortions up to certain gestational limits yet failed to substantially diminish unsafe practices; as of recent surveys, 78% of procedures occur outside formal facilities, contributing to 8–10% of maternal deaths from complications. By October 2025, 12 U.S. states maintain total bans with narrow exceptions, while global patterns lack a clear directional shift; laws prohibiting entirely affect about 6% of women of reproductive age, though broader restrictions encompass roughly 40% of the .

Role of Socioeconomic Factors and Alternatives

Socioeconomic conditions, particularly and low , are primary drivers of unintended pregnancies and subsequent unsafe abortions, independent of legal frameworks. In low- and middle-income countries, where 97% of global unsafe abortions occur, limited access to affordable contraception and services exacerbates the incidence of unplanned pregnancies, often leading women to seek clandestine procedures due to economic constraints rather than regulatory prohibitions alone. Empirical studies confirm that women from lower socioeconomic strata face higher risks of complications from unsafe abortions, as financial barriers prevent timely access to skilled providers or post-procedure care, perpetuating a cycle of maternal morbidity. Cultural norms and gaps in reproductive further compound these vulnerabilities by discouraging consistent contraceptive use and delaying recognition of risks. For instance, in regions with high fertility preferences tied to traditional roles, combined with inadequate schooling on , women in impoverished households report resorting to unsafe methods when facing economic inability to support additional children. Data from , where 77% of abortions are unsafe despite varying legal statuses, illustrate how entrenched poverty overrides other factors, with socioeconomic disadvantage accounting for disparities in abortion safety across income levels. Effective alternatives to mitigate unsafe abortions emphasize socioeconomic interventions over procedural expansion, such as enhanced and contraception provision, which demonstrably lower rates. Programs providing free or subsidized modern contraceptives have reduced abortion rates by up to 50% in targeted populations by averting unplanned conceptions, while correlates with a more than 3% decline in teen birth rates through improved knowledge and decision-making. Maternal support systems, including financial aid, childcare subsidies, and , further decrease reliance on abortion by addressing root causes like economic hardship, as evidenced by declines in unwanted pregnancies following such holistic policies. Countries exemplifying this approach, such as with its restrictive laws alongside robust welfare provisions—including generous maternity leave, child allowances, and —maintain low maternal mortality ratios (around 2-3 per 100,000 live births pre- and post-restriction) and minimal reported unsafe abortion complications, contrasting with higher rates in economically strained liberal-regime nations. These outcomes underscore that socioeconomic bolstering, rather than abortion liberalization, yields safer reproductive landscapes by curbing demand through preventive support.

References

  1. [1]
    Safe abortion - Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research (SRH)
    Unsafe abortion occurs when a pregnancy is terminated either by persons lacking the necessary skills or in an environment that does not conform to minimal ...
  2. [2]
    Unsafe abortion: A preventable danger - Doctors Without Borders
    Unsafe abortion is a procedure for terminating an unwanted pregnancy either by people lacking the necessary skills, or in an environment lacking minimal medical ...
  3. [3]
    Abortion - World Health Organization (WHO)
    May 17, 2024 · Unsafe abortion is an important preventable cause of maternal deaths and morbidities. It can lead to physical and mental health complications ...Abortion care guideline · Aborto · Maintaining essential health...
  4. [4]
    Unsafe Abortion: Consequences, Facts & Statistics
    “An abortion is unsafe when it is carried out either by a person lacking the necessary skills or in an environment that does not conform to minimal medical ...
  5. [5]
    Global, regional, and subregional classification of abortions by ...
    25·1 million (45·1%, 40·6–50·1) abortions each year between 2010 and 2014 were unsafe, with 24·3 million (97%) of these in developing countries.<|control11|><|separator|>
  6. [6]
    [PDF] Unsafe Abortion - Guttmacher Institute
    In particular, two key factors impact unsafe abor- tion rates: access to contraceptives and to safe abortion services. Extensive research shows that behind ...
  7. [7]
    [PDF] Studying unsafe abortion – A practical guide - CommonHealth
    1 Independent of prevailing legislation, an unsafe abortion is defined by the WHO as "... a procedure for terminating unwanted pregnancy either by persons ...
  8. [8]
    Abortion: Safety - World Health Organization (WHO)
    Sep 24, 2020 · Abortions are safe when they are carried out with a method that is recommended by WHO and that is appropriate to the pregnancy duration.
  9. [9]
    Abortion care guideline - World Health Organization (WHO)
    Mar 8, 2022 · The objective of this guideline is to present the complete set of all WHO recommendations and best practice statements relating to abortion.<|separator|>
  10. [10]
    The Roadmap to Safe Abortion Worldwide: Lessons from New ...
    Mar 20, 2018 · Worldwide, an estimated 55% of abortions can be categorized as safe, 31% as less safe and 14% as least safe.
  11. [11]
    Inside the 1970s Abortion Underground - POLITICO
    May 6, 2022 · In 1971, Laura Kaplan joined a clandestine network called “Jane” that provided thousands of illegal abortions in Chicago.
  12. [12]
    The Public Health Impact of Legal Abortion: 30 Years Later
    Jan 1, 2003 · ... deaths from illegal abortion—especially after Roe v. Wade—from 39 in 1972 to two in 1976. After 1975, mortality due to legally induced abortion ...
  13. [13]
    Self-Managed Abortion Attempts Before vs After Changes in Federal ...
    Jul 30, 2024 · This survey study examines changes in self-managed abortion attempts from before to after the 2022 Supreme Court decision to overturn ...
  14. [14]
    After Dobbs decision, more women are managing their own abortions
    Aug 11, 2024 · This can be done using safe, reliable accessing of mifepristone and/or misoprostol, though some patients may not be aware or able to access this ...<|separator|>
  15. [15]
    A Patchwork of Access: Self-Managed Medication Abortion in Post ...
    Jun 21, 2024 · Research shows that self-managed medication abortion accessed through online telehealth is medically safe and effective, but prospective ...
  16. [16]
    Abortion Rates by Country 2025 - World Population Review
    According to the World Health Organization, roughly 73 million induced abortions occur worldwide each year, with 61% of all unintended pregnancies and 29% ...
  17. [17]
    Worldwide, an estimated 25 million unsafe abortions occur each year
    Sep 28, 2017 · Unsafe abortion occurs when a pregnancy is terminated either by persons lacking the necessary skills/information or in an environment that does ...
  18. [18]
    From Unsafe to Safe Abortion in Sub-Saharan Africa: Slow but ...
    Dec 31, 2020 · Abortion is riskier in Sub-Saharan Africa than in any other world region: As of 2010–2014, 77% of abortions in the region are unsafe, compared ...
  19. [19]
    Despite Bans, Number of Abortions in the United States Increased in ...
    Mar 19, 2024 · This represents a rate of 15.9 abortions per 1,000 women of reproductive age, and is a 11% increase since 2020, the last year for which ...
  20. [20]
    Abortion Trends Before and After Dobbs - KFF
    Jul 15, 2025 · The latest SFP's #WeCount data show that in 2024, there were an estimated 1.14 million abortions, slightly up from 1.05 million in 2023. The ...
  21. [21]
    Guttmacher Institute Releases Full-Year US Abortion Data for 2024
    Apr 15, 2025 · The Guttmacher Institute today released new data showing that in 2024 there were 1,038,100 clinician-provided abortions in US states without ...
  22. [22]
    Abortion incidence between 1990 and 2014: global, regional, and ...
    Aug 19, 2025 · These estimates can also motivate investments in helping women avoid the recourse to and consequences of unsafe abortion where safe abortion is ...
  23. [23]
    Abortion Rates Declined Significantly In the Developed World ...
    May 11, 2016 · "Estimates for the proportion of abortions that are unsafe are under development, but it is likely that where access to safe abortion is limited ...
  24. [24]
    The effects of post-Dobbs abortion bans on fertility - ScienceDirect.com
    The results indicate that states with abortion bans experienced an average increase in births of 2.3 percent relative to if no bans had been enforced.
  25. [25]
    Victory for Women's Rights: Nigerian Federal High Court Affirms ...
    Jun 26, 2025 · Victory for Women's Rights: Nigerian Federal High Court Affirms Right to Safe Abortion for Survivors of Sexual Violence.
  26. [26]
    Unsafe Abortion: Unnecessary Maternal Mortality - PMC - NIH
    WHO deems unsafe abortion one of the easiest preventable causes of maternal mortality and a staggering public health issue. Scope of the Problem. Obtaining ...
  27. [27]
    Historical perspective on induced abortion through the ages and its ...
    Pre-modern history. Medical methods were used to induce abortion in ancient times but their effectiveness is doubtful. The Ebers papyrus, from Egypt around ...
  28. [28]
    Abortion in Antiquity
    The first indications that abortion was common in ancient civilizations appear in the Ancient Egyptian Papyrus Ebers, which dates from ca. 1600 BC.Missing: evidence | Show results with:evidence
  29. [29]
    Abortion in the Ancient Near East and Greco-Roman World
    May 11, 2023 · Ancient methods for ridding oneself of a pregnancy included remedies meant to be rubbed, ingested, or inserted into the body.Missing: evidence | Show results with:evidence
  30. [30]
    Fertility control in ancient Rome - PMC - PubMed Central - NIH
    Nov 2, 2020 · Soranus, however, wanted to make methods of non-conception, and even abortion, available to wives, under the pro-natalist banner. The second ...
  31. [31]
    Abortion and Contraception in the Middle Ages | Scientific American
    Dec 11, 2020 · The second-century gynecology of Soranus of Ephesus details these recipes and advocates their use for women who have a medical reason to ...
  32. [32]
    Abortion Drugs Fundamental to Ancient Economies, Argues Historian
    Apr 29, 2022 · His work shows that people going all the way back to ancient Egypt relied on a variety of herbal abortifacients (abortion-inducing substances) ...
  33. [33]
    Abortion under socialism - Communist Party USA
    Aug 12, 2022 · Illegal abortions rose sharply following adoption of the 1936 decree. Unsurprisingly, the result was an increase in abortion-related ...Missing: unsafe | Show results with:unsafe
  34. [34]
    When Soviet Women Won the Right to Abortion (For the Second Time)
    Mar 8, 2020 · Women who transgressed the ban not only risked serious injury or worse by having an illegal abortion, but if caught they also faced imprisonment ...Missing: unsafe | Show results with:unsafe
  35. [35]
    Why was abortion banned in the USSR, and then allowed in 1955
    Nov 29, 2023 · However, restrictions on abortion were introduced almost immediately, and in 1936 it was completely banned ... clandestine abortions and the ...Missing: unsafe | Show results with:unsafe
  36. [36]
    Activists Say Romania Has Been Quietly Phasing Out Abortion - NPR
    Sep 1, 2021 · In 1966, Romania's communist leader, Nicolae Ceausescu, banned abortion and contraception in an attempt to raise the nation's low birthrate.
  37. [37]
    Guardians of the Decree: The Hidden World of the Anti-Abortion ...
    Jan 31, 2022 · Decree 770 of 1966, which almost completely banned abortions in Romania, resulted in tragic consequences for generations of women.
  38. [38]
    Romania's abortion ban tore at society, a warning for U.S.
    Sep 15, 2022 · Romania's abortion ban between 1966 and 1989 caused maternal mortality rates to jump and left people wary of one another.
  39. [39]
    Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act of India: Treading the ... - NIH
    Jul 14, 2023 · We look at the laws governing abortion in India, the practical and ethical considerations, the recent amendments in these laws and the road ahead.
  40. [40]
    Medical termination of pregnancy: A global perspective and Indian ...
    Apr 5, 2023 · The first exclusive law for abortion in India was passed in 1971. Until then, abortion was completely prohibited except for saving a woman's ...
  41. [41]
    Unsafe abortion: Combating the silent menace
    With the goal of decreasing the number of maternal deaths due to unsafe abortions, the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act of India (1971) was adopted ...
  42. [42]
    [PDF] An Overview of Clandestine Abortion in Latin America
    Estimated rates of abortion are highest in Peru and Chile (each year, almost one woman in every 20 aged 15–49 has an induced abortion), intermediate in Brazil, ...Missing: networks | Show results with:networks
  43. [43]
    The making of clandestinity: “strategic ignorance” in abortion ...
    Abortion is a “public secret” in Latin America. It is highly restricted across most of the continent and yet millions of abortions take place every year.
  44. [44]
    Abortion Worldwide 2017: Uneven Progress and Unequal Access
    Mar 19, 2018 · This report provides updated information on the incidence of abortion worldwide, the laws that regulate abortion and the safety of its provision.
  45. [45]
    What the data says about abortion in the U.S. | Pew Research Center
    Mar 25, 2024 · It said there were 930,160 abortions that year in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, compared with 916,460 in 2019. How the CDC gets ...Missing: global | Show results with:global<|separator|>
  46. [46]
    Abortion Surveillance, United States, 1984-1985 - CDC
    In 1972, 90 women died as a result of abortion. Of those, 24 (27%) were related to a legally induced abortion and 39 (43%) to an illegal abortion.
  47. [47]
    Abortion mortality, United States, 1972 through 1987 - PubMed
    There were 667 reported deaths during 1972-87, of which 240 were due to legally induced abortion, 88 due to illegal abortions, and 172 due to spontaneous ...
  48. [48]
    Self-Managed Abortion in the United States - PMC - NIH
    Mar 7, 2023 · Evidence indicates that there is growing demand for self-managed abortion in the USA as obstacles to facility-based care increase.
  49. [49]
    Medication Abortion Accounted for 63% of All US Abortions in 2023 ...
    Mar 19, 2024 · This is an increase from 2020, when medication abortions accounted for 53% of all abortions. Medication abortions accounted for more than 60% of ...
  50. [50]
    WeCount report, April 2022 to December 2024
    Jun 23, 2025 · Total abortions in the US have increased since Dobbs · US abortions totaled 1.14 million in 2024 · Monthly average number of abortions increased ...
  51. [51]
    Abortion with no medical help? It nearly doubled in 2023, study shows
    Aug 5, 2024 · Wade fell. The study found that the use of mifepristone to self-manage abortion has nearly doubled from 6.6% in 2021 to 11.0% in 2023.
  52. [52]
    Maternal Mortality in the United States After Abortion Bans
    (Estimates of the maternal mortality rate for Native American women in ... illegal-abortions. 19↑ p ≤ 0.0001. 20↑ p ≤ 0.0001. 21↑ p ≤ 0.001. 22↑ p ...
  53. [53]
    US Abortion Bans and Infant Mortality | Women's Health | JAMA
    Feb 13, 2025 · Conclusions US states that adopted abortion bans had higher than expected infant mortality after the bans took effect. The estimated relative ...
  54. [54]
    Two New Studies Provide Broadest Evidence to Date of Unequal ...
    Feb 13, 2025 · The researchers estimate that the fertility rate in states with abortion bans was 1.7% higher than expected, with 60.55 live births per 1,000 ...
  55. [55]
    Unsafe abortion: the silent scourge - Oxford Academic
    Foreign bodies inserted through the cervix include sticks, roots, wires, knitting needles, coat hangers, rubber catheters and bougies, ball-point pens, bicycle ...
  56. [56]
    Anatomy of a coat hanger abortion | Dr. Jen Gunter
    Jul 13, 2013 · A coat hanger is technically narrow enough to get through a pregnant cervical os, but the end is sharp not tapered so it can lacerate and perforate.
  57. [57]
    Coat Hangers and Knitting Needles: A Brief History of Self-Induced ...
    Mar 10, 2016 · These are just some of the methods that women used to self-induce abortion in the early twentieth century, when abortion was illegal. This ...
  58. [58]
    [PDF] unsafe abortions and their complications - world wide journals
    Unskilled providers also improperly perform dilation and curettage in unhygienic settings, causing uterine perforations and infections 14. Similarly, other ...<|separator|>
  59. [59]
    Dilation and Curettage - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIH
    May 7, 2023 · A D&C is an invasive procedure with obvious risks and benefits for pregnant and nonpregnant patients. ... Review Methods for induced abortion.Missing: unsafe coat hanger sticks
  60. [60]
    Reemergence of self-induced abortions - PubMed
    The self-induced abortion had been attempted with a coat hanger inserted into the cervical os some time in the 3 days before admission to the hospital. The ...Missing: invasive sticks dilation curettage
  61. [61]
    uterine rupture as complication of unsafe abortion in a Ugandan girl
    Oct 20, 2017 · Common methods of unsafe abortions include vaginal insertion of dangerous objects such as herbs, twigs, or other sharp or caustic entities, as ...Missing: techniques | Show results with:techniques
  62. [62]
    Toxicities of Herbal Abortifacients - PMC - PubMed Central - NIH
    Traditional medicine texts have cautioned against the toxic effects of rue teas when used in higher doses as an abortifacient [29]. 3.3.2. Toxicity. A ...Missing: silphium | Show results with:silphium
  63. [63]
    The terrifying history of herbal abortion medicines - Gizmodo
    Aug 10, 2012 · Pennyroyal oil, on the other hand, is toxic. Either ... Toxic abortifacients were not just harmful to women, but harmful to the fetus.
  64. [64]
    The Bad Old Days: Abortion in America Before Roe v. Wade - HuffPost
    Jan 15, 2015 · In the 1950s, estimates of numbers of illegal, unsafe abortions ranged widely, from 200,000 to 1.2 million per year. The methods used were often ...
  65. [65]
    Efficacy of Misoprostol Alone for First-Trimester Medical Abortion - NIH
    Misoprostol alone is effective and safe and is a reasonable option for women seeking abortion in the first trimester.
  66. [66]
    What is a Misoprostol Only Abortion? - Blue Ridge Pregnancy Center
    May 24, 2023 · Using Misoprostol alone can also lead to increased pain and bleeding and a higher risk of incomplete abortion. The medical community does ...
  67. [67]
    Overlooked Dangers of Mifepristone, the FDA's Reduced REMS ...
    Dec 16, 2021 · It has been argued that abortions induced with mifepristone and misoprostol (or even misoprostol alone) are so safe and efficacious that they can be self- ...
  68. [68]
    Abortion-related morbidity in six Latin American and Caribbean ...
    Aug 20, 2021 · It has been shown that there is an association between proportion of unsafe abortion and highly restrictive laws, suggesting that an enabling ...
  69. [69]
    The use of misoprostol in termination of second-trimester pregnancy
    The package warned that misoprostol could cause birth defects if given to pregnant women. Teratogenic effects were reported with failed abortion and attempted ...Missing: modern unsafe
  70. [70]
    Global, regional, and subregional classification of abortions by ...
    Sep 27, 2017 · The highest proportion of least-safe abortions occurred in middle Africa, followed by western Africa and eastern Africa. Figure 4 Distribution ...
  71. [71]
    Unsafe abortion: an avoidable tragedy - ScienceDirect.com
    An estimated 60 000–70 000 women die annually from complications of unsafe abortion and hundreds of thousands more suffer long-term consequences which ...
  72. [72]
    Complications of Unsafe and Self-Managed Abortion
    Mar 11, 2020 · Those using unsafe methods may need lifesaving critical care for sepsis, hemorrhage, pelvic-organ injury, or toxic exposures.
  73. [73]
    Self-Managed Abortion Increased After Dobbs - ANSIRH
    Jul 30, 2024 · Of those who attempted to self-manage their abortion, the percentage of people using mifepristone nearly doubled post-Dobbs from 6.6% in 2021 ...
  74. [74]
    Exploring the determinants of unsafe abortion - Oxford Academic
    Dec 15, 2009 · Using the WHO definition, we classified an induced abortion as unsafe if it was performed by an unskilled provider (the woman herself, a ...Missing: untrained | Show results with:untrained
  75. [75]
    Reducing the harms of unsafe abortion: a systematic review of ... - NIH
    Most pregnant persons who received harm reduction counselling induced abortion using misoprostol (79%–100%). Serious complication rates were low (0%–1%).Missing: empirical | Show results with:empirical
  76. [76]
    Self-managed abortions have become more common in the US post ...
    Jul 30, 2024 · Despite these concerns, about 15% of women who self-managed an abortion said they had complications such as bleeding or pain that required them ...
  77. [77]
    Infectious Complications of Abortion - PMC - PubMed Central - NIH
    Nov 23, 2022 · The key points are: (1) Making abortion illegal does not reduce its incidence or prevalence; rather, it only makes abortions unsafe, increasing ...
  78. [78]
    Emergency surgery for uterine and bowel perforation resulting from ...
    Complications of unsafe abortion are incomplete abortion, massive hemorrhage, sepsis, uterine perforation, genital injury or bowel injury. Uterine perforation ...Missing: immediate | Show results with:immediate
  79. [79]
    Septic Abortion: Prevention and Management | GLOWM
    Perforation markedly increases the risk of serious sepsis. Illegal abortion by insertion of rigid foreign objects increases risk of perforation.<|separator|>
  80. [80]
    Advancing knowledge and public health: a scientific exploration of ...
    May 24, 2025 · Surgical abortion, particularly vacuum aspiration, offers comparable safety with a major complication rate below 0.2%. When provided by trained ...
  81. [81]
    An unusual complication of unsafe abortion - PMC - NIH
    In developing countries, most of the unsafe abortions are performed by untrained personnel leading to high mortality and morbidity ... untrained abortion ...
  82. [82]
    Abortion Complications - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIH
    Jun 22, 2025 · Septic abortion is a medical emergency; early signs may include fever, uterine tenderness, tachycardia, and malodorous discharge.
  83. [83]
    WHO issues new guidelines on abortion to help countries deliver ...
    Mar 9, 2022 · In countries where abortion is most restricted, only 1 in 4 abortions are safe, compared to nearly 9 in 10 in countries where the procedure is ...
  84. [84]
    Measuring Unsafe Abortion-Related Mortality: A Systematic Review ...
    The WHO estimates that 13% of maternal mortality is due to unsafe abortion, but challenges with measurement and data quality persist.
  85. [85]
    The Big Lie: Thousand of Illegal Abortion Deaths | EWTN
    A simple statistical analysis shows that pro-abortionists are lying about illegal abortion deaths all over the world.
  86. [86]
    [PDF] Illegal Abortion: Truth vs. Fiction - Scholars Crossing
    Feb 4, 2022 · While the deaths from illegal abortion prior to Roe were highly exaggerated, many ... “The Pro-Life Reply to: 'Women will die from illegal ...
  87. [87]
    Lessons from Before Roe: Will Past be Prologue?
    Mar 1, 2003 · By 1965, the number of deaths due to illegal abortion had fallen to just under 200, but illegal abortion still accounted for 17% of all deaths ...
  88. [88]
    Induced termination of pregnancy before and after Roe v Wade ...
    Legal-abortion mortality between 1979 and 1985 was 0.6 death per 100,000 procedures, more than 10 times lower than the 9.1 maternal deaths per 100,000 live ...
  89. [89]
    Abortion Surveillance — United States, 2022 | MMWR - CDC
    Nov 28, 2024 · Each death is categorized by abortion type as legal induced, illegal induced, spontaneous, or unknown type. This report provides PMSS data on ...
  90. [90]
    Changes in maternal morbidity and infant outcomes following state ...
    Jul 2, 2025 · States with abortion bans did not experience significant changes in maternal morbidity rates post-Dobbs, while states without bans experienced ...Statistical Methods · Congenital Anomalies · Maternal Morbidities
  91. [91]
    Chronic Pelvic Pain and Infertility Resulting from Unrecognized ...
    Aug 2, 2017 · A 28-year-old primigravida presented with chronic pelvic pain and infertility. She had irregular menstrual cycles and reported scant yellow ...
  92. [92]
  93. [93]
    Can Abortion Cause Infertility? - Healthline
    Jan 16, 2020 · Most women have no fertility problems following abortion. However, very rarely, scarring following surgical abortion may affect a woman's ...
  94. [94]
    Unsafe abortion: an avoidable tragedy - PubMed
    ... long-term consequences which include chronic pelvic pain and infertility. The reasons for the continuing high incidence of unwanted pregnancy leading to ...Missing: studies | Show results with:studies
  95. [95]
    Association between pelvic inflammatory disease and abortions
    Aug 9, 2025 · 4 Sequelae in the pelvic inflammatory disease include ectopic pregnancy, infertility, chronic pelvic pain, hydrosalpinx, and tubo-ovarian ...
  96. [96]
    Psychological Consequences of Abortion among the Post Abortion ...
    This could be an alarming indication of unsafe abortion with frequent undesirable consequences (Table 4). Table 4. Age at first marriage and Place of abortion ...
  97. [97]
    The facts about abortion and mental health
    Jun 23, 2022 · “What's harmful are the stigma surrounding abortion, the lack of knowledge about it, and the lack of access.” Misconceptions about abortion are ...
  98. [98]
    Post-abortion Complications: A Narrative Review for Emergency ...
    Activation of a massive transfusion protocol may be required. Tranexamic acid (TXA) should also be considered. Literature has demonstrated that TXA may reduce ...
  99. [99]
    Infectious Complications of Abortion - Oxford Academic
    Nov 23, 2022 · As noted previously, prompt evacuation of the infected uterine contents under broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy is the mainstay in the treatment ...
  100. [100]
    Management of postabortion hemorrhage - ScienceDirect.com
    We propose an algorithm for treating postabortion hemorrhage as follows: (1) assessment and exam, (2) massage and medical therapy, (3) resuscitative measures.
  101. [101]
    Self reported outcomes and adverse events after medical abortion ...
    May 16, 2017 · Reported rates of adverse events are low. Women are able to self identify the symptoms of potentially serious complications, and most report ...Missing: empirical | Show results with:empirical
  102. [102]
    Articles Comparison of the effectiveness and safety of treatment of ...
    Although first trimester post-abortion care success rates have been reported to be slightly higher (94·5–96·7%),9, 10, 11 our treatment success rate was more ...
  103. [103]
    What's at stake as the Supreme Court hears case about abortion in ...
    Apr 23, 2024 · In Idaho, when a pregnant patient has complications, abortion is only legal to prevent the woman's death. But a federal law known as EMTALA ...
  104. [104]
    NEWS: Abortion bans have delayed emergency medical care. In ...
    Sep 19, 2024 · She'd taken abortion pills and encountered a rare complication; she had not expelled all of the fetal tissue from her body. She showed up at ...
  105. [105]
    Post-Roe Emergency Medicine: Policy, clinical, training, and ... - NIH
    Instead, we will be faced with managing complications of late presentations of ectopic pregnancies, missed abortions or retained products, self-managed or ...Missing: pill failure
  106. [106]
    Challenges and opportunities from using abortion harm reduction ...
    Jun 28, 2023 · Patients' delay to seek care, or healthcare providers' delay to provide due quality timely abortion care (due to denial or refusal to provide ...
  107. [107]
    Women's Perceived Barriers to Accessing Post-Abortion Care ...
    Aug 26, 2022 · These themes were: transportation barriers, stigma, and mistreatment (lack of analgesics, early discharge).
  108. [108]
    Examining the rural-urban divide in predisposing, enabling, and ...
    Aug 5, 2022 · The likelihood of unsafe abortion was found to be 17% more likely in rural areas compared to urban counterparts in India (Table 3, model 1).
  109. [109]
    Perceived health facility-related barriers and post-abortion care ...
    Jun 16, 2023 · This study examined the influence of perceived health facility-related barriers (HFRB) on post-abortion care-seeking intention (PACSI) among women of ...
  110. [110]
    Unveiling 10‐Year Dynamics of Pregnancy Termination Across Sub ...
    Apr 28, 2025 · Unsafe abortions are often carried out using various risky methods such as oral or intravenous administration, vaginal preparations, insertion ...
  111. [111]
    High severity of abortion complications in fragile and conflict ...
    Mar 4, 2023 · Our study aims to describe the magnitude and severity of abortion-related complications in two referral hospitals supported by Médecins Sans Frontières.
  112. [112]
    Global Consequences of Unsafe Abortion - Susheela Singh, 2010
    This article will review the scientific evidence on the consequences of unsafe abortion, highlight gaps in the evidence base, suggest areas where future ...
  113. [113]
    perspectives on health system barriers to post-abortion care in ...
    Nov 21, 2024 · Other barriers to quality PAC include poor providers' attitudes, inadequate knowledge of abortion, and lack of awareness of PAC, and provider ...
  114. [114]
    Provision of Medications for Self-Managed Abortion Before and After ...
    May 14, 2024 · Prior research indicates that in the 6 months following Dobbs, approximately 32 360 fewer abortions were provided within the US formal health ...
  115. [115]
    Abortion in Countries with Restrictive Abortion Laws—Possible ... - NIH
    Nov 20, 2021 · A study conducted in Zambia demonstrated that despite liberal abortion law the percentage of complications of unsafe abortions was still high ...
  116. [116]
    Everything Old Is New Again—Debunked Criticism of Guttmacher ...
    Dec 14, 2012 · Koch et al. charge that Guttmacher's estimate of 122,455 induced abortions in Mexico City in 2009 is inflated "at least 10-fold," on the basis ...
  117. [117]
    Nearly half of abortions each year are unsafe, study says - CNN
    Sep 27, 2017 · Only about half of abortions performed around the world each year between 2010 and 2014 were safe, according to a new report from the WHO ...
  118. [118]
    Response to Guttmacher Institute criticisms by Koch et al. on the ...
    May 25, 2012 · So far, we are unaware of empirical data demonstrating a causal link between prohibiting abortion and an increase in maternal mortality. Rather, ...
  119. [119]
    Clear and Growing Evidence That Dobbs Is Harming Reproductive ...
    May 31, 2024 · Within 30 days of the Dobbs decision, 43 clinics in 11 states had stopped providing abortion care. By 100 days after the decision, this had ...
  120. [120]
    The relationship between state-level abortion policy and maternal ...
    Aug 14, 2025 · While deaths from legal, induced abortion procedures are rare, abortion restrictions can lead to greater numbers of unsafe, illegal, or self- ...
  121. [121]
    [PDF] Abortion Surveillance — United States, 2022 - CDC
    Nov 28, 2024 · Without medical guidance on how to report these data, the validity and reliability of gestational age for these reporting areas is uncertain.Missing: empirical | Show results with:empirical
  122. [122]
    Developing and validating an abortion care quality metric for facility ...
    Dec 2, 2023 · The Abortion Service Quality Initiative developed the first global standard for measuring quality of abortion care in low-income and middle-income countries.
  123. [123]
    Abortion Reporting in the United States: An Assessment of Three ...
    May 26, 2020 · Even relatively small amounts of differential reporting resulted in a substantial degree of bias in the estimated relationship between ...
  124. [124]
    A Medical Record Linkage Analysis of Abortion Underreporting
    Sep 2, 1996 · Only 56% of the women reported all of their abortions within one year of the medical record dates. These proportions show a level of variability ...Missing: complication | Show results with:complication
  125. [125]
    Fact Check: “Abortion is 14 Times Safer than Childbirth”
    Apr 25, 2024 · Deaths from complications of unsafe abortion: misclassified second trimester deaths. Reprod Health Matters. 2004;12(24 Suppl):27-38. doi ...
  126. [126]
    Abortion Rights - Amnesty International
    In many circumstances, those who have no choice but to resort to unsafe abortions also risk prosecution and punishment, including imprisonment, and can face ...
  127. [127]
    Why Abortion Is Unsafe And Dangerous - Americans United for Life
    The report "Unsafe" details over 2,400 health and safety deficiencies in abortion facilities, the dangers of chemical abortion drugs, and abortionists’ ...
  128. [128]
    How the Legal Status of Abortion Impacts Abortion Rates
    May 23, 2018 · Countries where abortion is legal only due to medical or social reasons have a 25 percent lower abortion rate than countries where abortion is ...
  129. [129]
    Response to Media Allegations that Abortion Restrictions Cause ...
    Mar 21, 2023 · Abortion restrictions will also reduce unwanted abortions. Abortion restrictions have not been shown to increase maternal mortality ratios in ...
  130. [130]
    Debatable Claims by the WHO that Abortion Restrictions Effect ...
    Apr 8, 2022 · “In countries with the most severe restrictions, only 1 in 4 abortions is safe, compared to nearly 9 in 10 in countries where it is extensively ...Missing: empirical | Show results with:empirical
  131. [131]
    The Influence of Abortion Law on the Frequency of Pregnancy ... - NIH
    Apr 13, 2021 · Women are made to undergo illegal terminations outside medical facilities. We are unable to provide the reliable assessment of the grey market ...
  132. [132]
    Research on the Early Impact of Dobbs on Abortion, Births and ...
    Sep 3, 2024 · This report provides a topline summary of the emerging body of research measuring the likely impact of the Dobbs decision on outcomes in four areas.Abortion Services and Access · Abortion Incidence · Contraceptive Use
  133. [133]
    The impact of hostile abortion legislation on the United States ...
    Dec 5, 2023 · Restrictions on legal and safe abortion can force individuals to resort to unsafe abortions performed by untrained individuals in unsafe ...
  134. [134]
    Abortion in India: Report Reveals Widespread Legal Barriers and ...
    Sep 27, 2021 · The study highlights the legal barriers to safe abortion access, including the way the MTP Act operates, which was meant as an exemption to the ...
  135. [135]
    India's Abortion Laws Offer Pregnant Women an Illusion of Choice
    Sep 9, 2024 · Of the 15.6 million abortions carried out countrywide in 2015, 78% were outside of health facilities and were likely illegal and unsafe, ...
  136. [136]
    Abortion in the United States Dashboard - KFF
    Abortion Trends Before and After Dobbs. This brief reviews the different sources of abortion data in the United States, the factors that have affected abortion ...Key Facts on Abortion · Abortion Trends Before and... · Criminal Penalties for...
  137. [137]
    The World's Abortion Laws - Center for Reproductive Rights
    (6%) women of reproductive agelive in 21 countries that prohibit abortion altogether. These are the most restrictive abortion laws in the world.
  138. [138]
    Low Socioeconomic Status Leading to Unsafe Abortion-related ...
    Oct 16, 2018 · The purpose of this study was to seek an association between low socioeconomic status and complications related to unsafe abortion.
  139. [139]
    Relationship of family formation characteristics with unsafe abortion ...
    Jun 17, 2016 · Previous research has shown that low socio-economic status is the main risk factor for resorting to unsafe abortions [11–14]. This may be owing ...
  140. [140]
    Exploring the reasons for unsafe abortion among women in the ...
    According to the World Health Organization (WHO), an unsafe abortion is defined as an abortion done outside of a health facility, a pregnancy terminated by ...
  141. [141]
    Socio – economic determinants of abortion among women in ...
    Jul 19, 2018 · Due the fact that most of abortions are considered illegal and unsafe in Africa, the total prevalence of abortion in Africa was stable between ...
  142. [142]
    A decomposition analysis of socioeconomic inequalities in unsafe ...
    Apr 2, 2022 · This study measured socioeconomic-related unsafe abortion inequality among women presenting for abortion care services in Lusaka and the Copperbelt provinces ...
  143. [143]
    Access to free birth control reduces abortion rates - WashU Medicine
    A study from Washington University School of Medicine shows that providing free birth control to women reduces unplanned pregnancies and abortions.
  144. [144]
    More comprehensive sex education reduced teen births - NIH
    Feb 14, 2022 · Our results show that federal funding for more comprehensive sex education reduced county-level teen birth rates by more than 3%.
  145. [145]
    Impacts of Increasing Access to Contraception for Women
    Apr 24, 2024 · Preventing unplanned pregnancies through contraception has led to significant cost savings for government programs, largely by reducing maternity and infant ...
  146. [146]
    Women Call for More Education, Contraceptive Choices to Prevent ...
    Mar 7, 2019 · Results from focus groups conducted by Urban with women across the country offer a window into the reasons women want to prevent unplanned pregnancy.
  147. [147]
    The Human Toll of Poland's Strict Abortion Laws | TIME
    Oct 13, 2023 · Officially in 2020, there were seven maternal deaths in Poland. In 2021, there were nine.
  148. [148]
    Unintended pregnancy and abortion by income, region ... - The Lancet
    Jul 22, 2020 · Limits on access to services, in contrast, contribute to unintended pregnancy and, when access is limited, unsafe abortion. 6. Ganatra, B ...Missing: stagnation | Show results with:stagnation