23 Jan 2012

Who Gets Abortions?

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Today is the 39th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion, commonly known as Roe v. Wade. I knew I wanted to write about abortion today, and so have been doing some research. The research has gripped me. You see, I consider abortion as the taking of a human life, and so learning how many of those human lives are interrupted each year has been sobering.

According to the Guttmacher Institute (http://web.archive.org/web/20080313054435/http://www.guttmacher.org/in-the-know/incidence.html ) 46 million abortions occur yearly, worldwide. I can’t wrap my mind around 46 million, so I’ll focus on the U.S., in which 3400 occur every day.

And who are those 3400 women? 41 percent are white, 32 percent are black, and 20 percent are Hispanic. Woman for woman, though, more blacks and Hispanics have abortions, compared with white women. For every 1000 white American women, 13 have an abortion each year, whereas black women have 49 per 1000, and Hispanics have 33 per 1000. The Guttmacher Institute (http://web.archive.org/web/20080311171704/http://www.guttmacher.org/in-the-know/characteristics.html) concludes, “Over time, women having abortions have become increasingly likely to be poor, nonwhite and unmarried, and to already have one or more children.”

If you take a group of 45-year-old American women, who have reached the age when the likelihood of pregnancy is small, one out of three will have had an abortion. A lot of those women regret that abortion, and I ache for them.