| 28 Septembre 2017
28 SEPTEMBER 2017 |GENEVA – Worldwide, 25 million unsafe abortions (45%  of all abortions) occurred every year between 2010 and 2014, according  to a new study by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Guttmacher  Institute published today in The Lancet. The majority of unsafe  abortions, or 97%, occurred in developing countries in Africa, Asia and  Latin America.
 
 “Increased efforts are needed, especially in developing regions, to  ensure access to contraception and safe abortion,” says Dr Bela Ganatra,  lead author of the study and a scientist in the WHO Department of  Reproductive Health and Research.
 
 “When women and girls cannot access effective contraception and safe  abortion services, there are serious consequences for their own health  and that of their families. This should not happen. But despite recent  advances in technology and evidence, too many unsafe abortions still  occur, and too many women continue to suffer and die.”
 
 Classifying abortion safety
 
 The new Lancet study provides estimates on safe and unsafe abortions  globally. For the first time, it includes sub-classifications within the  unsafe abortion category as less safe or least safe. The distinction  allows for a more nuanced understanding of the different circumstances  of abortions among women who are unable to access safe abortions from a  trained provider.
 
 When abortions are performed in accordance with WHO guidelines and  standards, the risk of severe complications or death is negligible.  Approximately 55% of all abortions from 2010 to 2014 were conducted   safely, which means they were performed by a trained health worker using  a WHO-recommended method appropriate to the pregnancy duration.
 
 Almost one-third (31%) of abortions were “less safe,” meaning they were  either performed by a trained provider using an unsafe or outdated  method such as “sharp curettage”, or by an untrained person albeit using  a safe method like misoprostol, a drug that can be used for many  medical purposes, including to induce an abortion.
 
 About 14% were “least safe” abortions provided by untrained persons  using dangerous methods, such as introduction of foreign objects and use  of herbal concoctions. Deaths from complications of unsafe abortion  were high in regions where most abortions happened in the least safe  circumstances.
 
 Complications from “least-safe” abortions can include incomplete  abortion (failure to remove all of the pregnancy tissue from the  uterus), haemorrhage, vaginal, cervical and uterine injury, and  infections.
 
 Restrictive laws associated with high rates of unsafe abortions
 
 The study also looks at the contexts that commonly result in women  seeking unsafe abortions, including countries’ laws and policies on  abortion, the financial cost of accessing safe abortion services, the  availability of safe abortion services and trained health providers, and  societal attitudes toward abortion and gender equality.
 
 In countries where abortion is completely banned or permitted only to  save the woman’s life or preserve her physical health, only 1 in 4  abortions were safe; whereas, in countries where abortion is legal on  broader grounds, nearly 9 in 10 abortions were done safely. Restricting  access to abortions does not reduce the number of abortions.
 
 Most abortions that take place in Western and Northern Europe and North  America are safe. These regions also have some of the lowest abortion  rates. Most countries in these regions also have relatively permissive  laws on abortion; high levels of contraceptive use, economic  development, and gender equality; as well as high-quality health  services – all factors that contribute to making abortion safer.
 
 “Like many other common medical procedures, abortion is very safe when  done in accordance with recommended medical guidelines and that is  important to bear in mind,” says Dr Gilda Sedgh, co-author of the study  and principal research scientist, Guttmacher Institute.
 
 “In the high-income countries of North America and Western and Northern  Europe, where abortion is broadly legal and health systems are strong,  the incidence of unsafe abortions is the lowest globally.”
 
 Among developing regions, the proportion of abortions that were safe in  Eastern Asia (including China) was similar to developed regions. In  south-central Asia, however, less than 1 in 2 abortions were safe.  Outside of Southern Africa, less than 1 in 4 abortions in Africa were  safe. Of those unsafe abortions, the majority were characterized as  “least safe.”
 
 In Latin America, only 1 in 4 abortions were safe, though  the majority  were categorized as “less safe,” as it is increasingly common for women  in the region to obtain and self-administer medicines like misoprostol  outside of formal health systems. This has meant that this region has  seen fewer deaths and fewer severe complications from unsafe abortions.  Nevertheless, this type of informal self-use of medication abortion that  women have to resort to secretly does not meet WHO’s safe abortion  standards.
 
 Preventing unsafe abortion
 
 Unsafe abortion occurs when a pregnancy is terminated either by persons  lacking the necessary skills/information or in an environment that does  not conform to minimal medical standards, or both.
 
 To prevent unintended pregnancies and unsafe abortions, countries must  make supportive policies and financial commitments to provide  comprehensive sexuality education; a wide range of contraceptive  methods, including emergency contraception; accurate family planning  counselling; and access to safe, legal abortion.
 
 Provision of safe, legal abortion is essential to fulfilling the global  commitment to the Sustainable Development Goal of universal access to  sexual and reproductive health (target 3.7). WHO provides global  technical and policy guidance on the use of contraception to prevent  unintended pregnancy, on safe abortion, and the treatment of  complications from unsafe abortion.
 
 Earlier this year, WHO and the Population Division of the United Nations  Department of Economic and Social Affairs launched a new, open-access  database of laws, policies and health standards on abortion in countries  worldwide. The database aims to promote greater transparency of  abortion laws and policies, as well as to improve countries’  accountability for the protection of women and girls’ health and human  rights.
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2017/unsafe-abortions-worldwide/en/









