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QUESTION OF THE DAY - MỖI NGÀY MỘT NGHI VẤN
If you have any questions regarding to Catholic Faith.
Please email Father Truong Luan at:
MJTRUONGLUAN@AOL.COM |
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MY LIFE WAS CHANGED FOREVER
HOW ABORTION AFFECTS THE “GIRLS”
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The following quotations
are taken directly from medical studies on teen
abortions.
Teenagers, who account for about
30% of all abortions, are also at much higher risk of
suffering many abortion related complications. This is
true of both immediate complications and of long-term
reproductive damage.
Wadhera,
"Legal Abortion Among Teens," 1974-1978, Canadian
Medical Association Journal, 122:1386-1389, (June 1980).
The younger the patient,
the greater the gestation (time into the pregnancy), the
higher the complication rate…Some of the most
catastrophic complications occur in teenagers. M.
Bulfin, M.D., OB-GYN Observer, Oct.-Nov. 1975
Women under 17 have been found to
face twice the normal risk of suffering cervical damage
due to the fact that their cervixes are still "green"
and developing. Schulz, et al., "Measures to Prevent
Cervical Injury During Suction Curettage Abortion,"
The
Lancet (May 18, 1983) 1182-1184. Wadhera, "Legal
Abortion Among Teens," 1974-1978, Canadian Medical
Association (June 1980), vol. 122, 1386-1389 |
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The
number and types of physical complications resulting
from abortion are as diverse as the various abortion
methods. Depending upon the type of abortion performed,
physical complications can be as follows:
·
Cervical tearing and
laceration from the instruments.
·
Perforation of the uterus
by instruments. This may require major surgery,
including hysterectomy.
·
Scarring of the uterine
lining by suction tubing, curettes, or other
instruments.
·
Infection, local and
systemic.
·
Hemorrhage and shock,
especially if the uterine artery is torn.
·
Anesthesia toxicity from
both general or local anesthesia, resulting in possible
convulsions, cardiorespiratory arrest, and in extreme
cases, death.
·
Retained tissue, indicated
by cramping, heavy bleeding, and infection.
·
Postabortal syndrome,
referring to an enlarged, tender and soft uterus
retaining blood clots.
·
Failure to recognize an
ectopic pregnancy. This could lead to the rupture of a
fallopian tube, hemorrhage, and resulting infertility or
death, if treatment is not provided in time.
Dr.
Warren Hern, Abortion Practice, c. 1980 & Hern, W. "Long
Term Risks of Induced Abortion," Gynecology and
Obstetrics, 6:63 (1994) |
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Some
women experience immediate psychological problems from
abortion. Other women repress feelings of guilt,
delaying emotional reactions sometimes for several years
and oftentimes triggered by their first planned
pregnancy.
These
complications include:
·
Sad
mood.
·
Sudden and uncontrollable
crying episodes.
·
Deterioration of
self-concept.
·
Sleep, appetite and sexual
disturbances.
·
Reduced motivation.
·
Disruption in interpersonal
relationships.
·
Extreme guilt and anxiety.
·
Psychological "numbing."
·
Depression and thoughts of
suicide.
Listing provided by David Reardon, Ph.D., the Elliot
Institute and Paul C. Reisser, M.D. and Teri Reisser,
M.S., "Identifying and Overcoming Post-Abortion
Syndrome," (Colorado Springs: Focus on the Family,
1994), pg. 11. |
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National statistics on
abortion show that 10% of women undergoing abortions
suffer from immediate complications, of which one-fifth
were considered major. Grimes and Cates, "Abortion:
Methods and Complications," Human Reproduction, 2nd ed.,
796-813
The cervical damage which
results during abortion frequently results in a
permanent weakening of the cervix. This weakening may
result in an "incompetent cervix" which, unable to carry
the weight of a later "wanted" pregnancy, opens
prematurely, resulting in miscarriage or premature
birth. According to a study entitled "Cervical
Incompetence-Aetiology and Management" which appeared in
the Medical Journal of Australia, symptoms related to
cervical incompetence were found among 75% of women who
undergo forced dilation for abortion.
Another research study
entitled "Sexual Activity and Its Consequences in the
Teenager" published in Clinics in Ob&Gyn, found that
among teenagers who aborted their first pregnancies, 66%
subsequently experienced miscarriages or premature birth
of their second "wanted" pregnancies.
In a 5-year study, 25% of
women who have had abortions sought out psychiatric
care, versus just 3% of women who have not had
abortions. "Report on the Committee on the Operation of
the Abortion Law," p. 321, Ottawa, 1977
The relative risk of
secondary infertility among women with at least one
induced abortion and no spontaneous miscarriages was 3
to 4 times that among non-aborted women. D. Trichopoulos
et al, "Induced Abortion & Secondary Infertility,"
British Journal OB/GYN, vol. 83, Aug. 1976, pp. 645-650 |
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A new study published in
the June, 2004 issue of American Journal of Drug and
Alcohol Abuse strengthens the case for a connection
between abortion and substance abuse. The study found
that among women who had unintended first pregnancies,
those who had abortions were more likely to report more
frequent and recent use of alcohol, marijuana, and
cocaine.
The researchers reported
that the elevated rates of substance use among women who
had abortions might be linked to higher levels of
anxiety, depression, and unresolved grief which have
been measured in other studies of women with a history
of abortion. |
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