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Abortion Statistics

Heartlink Article Image The Status of the Law
In 1973, two U.S. Supreme Court decisions, Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton, radically changed the legal landscape of American abortion law. The combined effect of the rulings required abortion to be:
  • legal for any woman, regardless of her age
  • legal for any reason during the first seven months of pregnancy, and for virtually any reason thereafter.

Since 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of state laws which regulate and limit abortion in the following ways:

  • requiring a parent to be notified or give consent before a minor daughter has an abortion, subject to a judicial bypass option which allows a teenage girl to involve a judge rather than her parent(s);
  • requiring that women receive full medical disclosure of possible risks associated with and alternatives to abortion;
  • requiring that after receiving such information, adult women wait a period of 24 hours before having an abortion, and minors wait 48 hours;
  • prohibiting the use of state money to fund abortions for low-income women, except when the mother’s life is threatened by continuing the pregnancy, or in cases of rape or incest when payment is authorized under the federal Hyde Amendment.
Abortion Statistics

"The United States has one of the highest abortion rates among developed countries." (Facts in Brief, Alan Guttmacher Institute, 1995, New York, N.Y.) Listed below are the number of reported legal abortions for selected years between 1972 and 1997, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Abortion Surveillance Report, January 7, 2000.

1972--586,760 1993--1,330,414
1973--615,831 1994--1,267,415
1976--988,267
1995--1,210,883
1980--1,297,606
1996--1,221,585
1985--1,328,570
1997--1,184,758
1987-- 1,353,671
1989--1,396,658
1990-- 1,429,577
1991-1,388,937
1992--1,359,145
According to the CDC report, in 1995:
  • Roughly one-half of the women who had abortions in the U.S. had no other children;
  • 44 percent of the women who had abortions in the U.S. had at least one previous abortion;
  • 20 percent of women who had abortions in the U.S. were married; 80 percent were unmarried.
The percentage of teenagers (19 years of age and younger) having abortions began to drop in the 1980s, coinciding with the passage and enforcement of laws requiring a parent’s involvement in their teenage daughter’s abortion decision:

1972—32.6 1987—25.8 1993—20.0
1973—32.7 1989—24.2 1994—20.2
1976—32.1 1990—22.4 1995—20.1
1980—29.2 1991—21.0 1996—20.3
1985—26.3 1992—20.1 1997—20.1

A study of Minnesota’s teenage abortion rates before and after the enactment of the state’s parental notification law found that the abortion rates for teenage girls, ages 15-17, dropped with passage of the law. (American Journal of Public Health, "Impact of the Minnesota Parental Notification Law on Abortion and Birth," March 1991.) Abortion rates in the states of Michigan, Missouri, Indiana, Virginia, Nebraska and Mississippi also decreased after passage of parental involvement laws.

According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, the research arm of the nation’s leading abortion provider, Planned Parenthood:


  • At current rates, an estimated 43 percent of American women will have at least one abortion by the age of 45.
  • Unmarried women are six times more likely than married women to abort their unborn child.
  • The highest abortion rate is among 18- to 19-year-old women—56 percent per 1,000 women.
  • About 15,000 abortions each year are attributed to rape and incest—representing one percent of all abortions.

(Guttmacher statistics from Facts in Brief, 1995.)

  • Abortion and adverse pregnancy diagnosis
    According to a 1990 Canadian study of 22,000 women who received prenatal diagnosis, 88 percent of those who found they were carrying a child with Down syndrome aborted the unborn child.
    Other studies have put the rate of Down syndrome abortions at about 90 percent.

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