Talk:Unsafe abortion/Archive 1

Latest comment: 5 years ago by Thomasabeyer in topic Unsafe Abortions
Archive 1

Unsafe Abortions

Unsafe Abortion is a significant cause of maternal morbidity and mortality in the world, especialy in the developing countries (95% of unsafe abortions take place in developing countries). Every year 40 million induced abortions occur globally (IPAS) and according to the 2000 estimates (WHO) 19 millions unsafe abortions take place each year. According to WHO around 68,000 women die as a result of complications of unsafe abortion and between two million and seven million women each year survive unsafe abortion, but sustain long-term damage or disease (incomplete abortion, infection (sepsis), haemorrhage and injury to the internal organs, such as puncturing or tearing of the uterus).(IPAS) According to statistics of WHO one in ten pregnancies end in an unsafe abortion. The risk rate for unsafe abortion is 1/270, but according to other sources Unsafe abortion is responsible for one in eight maternal deaths. In order to limit the number of death caused by unsafe abortion the WHO recomandation are: priority for prevention of unplanned pregnancies , followed by improving the quality of abortion services and of post-abortion care (when safe abortion services are not available, services to treat the complications of unsafe abortion can consume up to 50% of hospital resources).

  • Unsafe abortion in the world
    • where abortion is illegal: Abortion law
    • where abortion is legal, but there is lack of provision of medical services
Unsafe Abortion: Mortality and Risk Estimates of Death data from WHO press, Geneva, 1997
  Unsafe Abortion Risk of Dying (Unsafe Abortion)/(Maternal Deaths)* 100
Africa 1 in 150 13%
Asia* 1 in 250 12%
Latin America 1 in 900 21%
Europe** 1 in 1900 17%
* Excludes Japan, Australia and New Zealand     ** Primarily Eastern Europe

—Preceding unsigned comment added by CristianChirita (talkcontribs) 20:34, 17 June 2005

ThinkProgress.com is not an academic source, or even a neutral journalistic one. The article cited does reference a book, however, which could be more scholarly if cited directly. Thomasabeyer (talk) 05:00, 2 July 2018 (UTC)

Word Use

I changed "mobidity" to "Mortality" in the first line. It made more sense, since mortality is death or death-realted, and morbidity is a preoccupation with unwholesome thoughts or feelings, like a sick fascination. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 209.159.176.165 (talkcontribs) 21:00, 21 February 2006

For what it's worth, actuaries distinguish between "mortality" and "morbidity." "Mortality" is refers to the risk of death, as in life insurance. "Morbidity" refers to the risk of injury or illness, as in health or disability insurance. I believe this actuarial usage is generally consistent with the use of the terms by demographers. Thus, using both term is appropriate if both death and injury are potential results. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 146.145.79.247 (talk) 15:46, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

UK terminology

This is known as a backstreet abortion in the UK. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.146.133.4 (talkcontribs) 13:01, 13 March 2006

Citations?

This article contains a lot of uncited anecdotes. Shouldn't these be removed or citations provided?--Dub8lad1 00:49, 29 May 2006 (UTC)

Citations and Neutrality

As Dub8lad1 said, a lot of this needs citations. Also, some things on the talk page don't relate to improving this article, but more of a one-sided debate. Wikipedia talk pages are not for debating the subject, they are for improving articles and making comments on the articles. Wikiagoo (talk) 23:40, 30 January 2011 (UTC)


I'm fixing a couple near "(WHO) estimated in 2011 that each year nearly 42 million women". First cite was to the book mentioned earlier, which is not the WHO so I'll just delete it. Second cite is naming a "Preventing Unsafe Abortion" that does not contain 42 million and is on the WHO site but is a 2006 publication from elsewhere, so I'll move that site and the index down to see also section and replace it with a WHO document published in 2011 which does say 42 million. Markbassett (talk) 20:11, 16 September 2013 (UTC)

And I corrected cite saying BM Journal that led to BM Bulletin; though I don't see the point of the line being here And I clarified cite that WHO republished what Lancet said, not that it's what WHO said ... And call it a day there - it can use still more citation work. Markbassett (talk) 21:15, 16 September 2013 (UTC)