
A new study found that infant mortality rates have increased in the American states that enacted the prohibition of abortion after the teacher’s ruling that reverses the right of women to reach the procedure.
According to researchers, there were an estimated 478 deaths in 14 states with a ban with heavy arrests or restrictions six weeks after pregnancy – which they say would not happen if they were not present.
Alison Jimmel, the co -leader of the study, said that “restricted abortion policies” could be “the opposite of decades of progress” in reducing the death of infants throughout the United States.
In its ruling in 2022, The US Supreme Court reflected its 50 -year -old Roe V Wade’s decision That was protecting the constitutional right of women to end the pregnancy to the point of the fetus, around the twenty -fourth week.
the study , This week was published by researchers From the Bloomberg College of Public Health of John Hopkin, I found an increase in death rates for children born in congenital issues, as well as among groups that have already been higher than the average death rates.
This included black infants, as well as for children whose parents were unmarried, younger, did not attend the university, and for those who live in the southern states.
As of January 2025, almost 17 states have banned almost all abortion, although some of them have narrow exceptions to rape, incest or mother health.
Countries include a complete ban that include Idahu, Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Messi, Aklhoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Western Virginia.
Florida, Georgia, Iowa and South Carolina prohibit the procedure six weeks after pregnancy.
Meanwhile, there is a ban in Nebraska and North Carolina for procedures after 12 weeks, while it is 18 weeks in Utah.
Ethical distortions
In the states that chose the age of new laws, infant mortality rates have risen to 6.26 per 1000 live births, compared to an expected rate of 5.93 per 1000 – with a relative increase of 5.6 %.
The study also found an increase in infant mortality from anomalous congenital cases, as it increased from 1.24 expected amounts per 1,000 live births to 1.37 per 1000 – a relative increase of 10.87 %.
Deaths rose from other causes to 4.89 per 1000 out of 4.69 expected, an increase of 4.23 %.
Among the black children of Spanish origin, there were 11.81 deaths per 1000 live births after the ban, compared to the expected rate of 10.66 per 1000, an increase of 11 %.
According to the research, the increase in infant mortality due to birth defects was compatible with women who were rejected by abortion for an unimportant pregnancy – as pregnancy cannot lead to a living child.
But the increase due to the heterogeneous causes is “less clear”, the researchers say.
The study also found that the embargo may affect an impartially proportional to the deprived population who are already exposed to the risk of infant mortality as well as delay in receiving medical care.
Separate research from the Bloomberg College of Public Health, John Hopkin, found that the abortion ban was also linked to increased fertility rates.
In the wake of the extinction of the Roe V Wade, which re -controlled the procedure to individual states, the researchers found that the number of births per 1000 females of childbearing age in the affected states increased by 1.7 %, or 22180.
The research suggested that the estimated fertility differences were greater in countries that are among the “worst results of the mother and child’s health.”
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