-
Decision rightness and relief predominate over the years following an abortion
-
A recent analysis from the Turnaway study focused on women who were just under the gestational limit of a clinic and received an abortion and those who had first trimester abortions to examine trends in decisional rightness and negative and positive emotions over 5 years after the abortion. Specifically, Rocca et al. (in press) analyzed these data and found that women were overwhemingly sure of their decision: 95% felt their decision was the right one at each assessment after their abortion, and the predicted probability of abortion being the right decision was 99% at 5 years afterwards. Relief was the most common emotion felt by women, and negative emotions or decision regret did not emerge over time. These results and others from studies conducted globally counter assertions by abortion opponents that women are not certain of their decisions, or that women regret or have mainly negative emotions about their abortions if not in the short run then after a long period of time. This commentary addresses not only these findings but also relevant U.S. abortion policies based on these unsubstantiated claims. Policies should not be based on the notions that women are unsure of their decision, come to regret, it or have negative emotions because there is no evidence to support these claims.
Located in
MPRC People
/
Julia Steinberg, Ph.D.
/
Julia Steinberg Publications
-
Declining Help in a Declining Economy: Trends in US Informal Volunteering: 2003-2013
-
John P. Robinson, University of Maryland; 2015-007
Located in
Research
/
Working Papers
/
WP Documents
-
Dennis Feehan, UC Berkeley
-
Comparing survey-based estimates of adult mortality to high-quality vital records: Evidence from 27 Brazilian cities
Located in
Coming Up
-
Depression and contraceptive behavioral patterns: Analyzing two longitudinal studies
-
Julia Steinberg, Family Science
Located in
Resources
/
…
/
Seed Grant Program
/
Seed Grants Awarded
-
Dept. of African American Studies John B. Slaughter Endowment Lecture by Dr. Kristin Turney
-
“The Waiting Game”: The Pervasiveness and Proliferation of Anticipatory Stress During Jail Incarceration
Located in
Coming Up
-
Desai co-authors brief on health insurance inequities in India
-
Many Indians do not take advantage of their insurance coverage
Located in
Research
/
Selected Research
-
Desai leads establishment of National Data Innovation Centre in New Delhi
-
Far-reaching program will stimulate research, support graduate student development in India and U.S.
Located in
Research
/
Selected Research
-
Desai, Chen research on Fathers' migration in Demographic Research
-
Examines nutritional impact of father outmigration
Located in
News
-
Despite pandemic challenges, poverty in India declines
-
Wave 3 of the IHDS complete, showing a decrease in poverty
Located in
News
-
Developing population health scientists: Findings from an evaluation of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholars Program
-
HIGHLIGHTS: RWJF Health & Society Scholars (HSS) program outcomes evaluated. HSS alumni have higher scholarly productivity and impact than control group. HSS alumni are more engaged in population health research than controls. HSS alumni and controls are similar on other outcome measures. Training programs can be evaluated with adequate attention to selection bias.
Located in
MPRC People
/
Christine Bachrach, Ph.D.
/
Christine Bachrach Publications