Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
International

Abortion Pill Requests Spike In Zika Outbreak Countries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2016 11:46 AM
    NEW YORK — Online requests for abortion pills spiked dramatically this year in Brazil, Ecuador and some other Latin American countries that ban abortions, an indication that women may be choosing to end pregnancies rather than risk birth defects stemming from a Zika virus outbreak.
     
    Researchers reported the trend after trying to understand how pregnant women are responding to the threat of Zika-related birth defects in countries where abortion is banned but the government is warning women to avoid pregnancy because of Zika outbreaks.
     
    The study, which was published Wednesday, has some major limitations. Researchers analyzed requests for abortion pills from just one online service, which is not believed to be representative of all the women in any of the nations studied. And the research does not answer how many abortions actually occurred in those countries.
     
    But it gives a first-of-its-kind look at an issue many have been wondering about. In the U.S., the states where Zika outbreaks are considered most likely — like Florida and Texas — are places where abortion restrictions have been increasing and the number of abortion providers shrinking.
     
    "If Zika does begin to transmit locally, you're looking at situations for (U.S.) women that may not be that different from countries like Brazil or Ecuador," said the lead author, Dr. Abigail Aiken of the University of Texas.
     
    The Zika virus, which is spread mainly by a tropical mosquito, causes only a mild illness, at worst, in most people. But during recent Zika outbreaks in Latin America, scientists determined that infection during pregnancy has led to severe brain-related birth defects.
     
    For every 100 pregnancies involving women infected early in their pregnancy, an estimated 1 to 15 will result in severe birth defects, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
     
    The researchers approached Women on Web, an international online service that tries to help women access abortion services.
     
     
    The non-profit organization, which gets 1 million visits a month, provides online consultations. In some situations, Women on Web can arrange for shipment of a combination of pills that will induce an abortion.
     
    In other situations — like Brazil, where authorities have been confiscating medicines sent through the mail — Women on Web gives advice on where women might travel for an abortion, said Dr. Rebecca Gomperts, a Dutch physician who founded the online service.
     
    That's why the study reflects requests for services, and not pills provided or actual abortions, said Gomperts, who is a co-author of the study.
     
    The research was published online Wednesday by the New England Journal of Medicine.
     
    It looked at requests to Women on Web from 19 countries from 2010 through early this year, including eight where Zika outbreaks, government warnings and abortion bans all were occurring at the same time.
     
    The researchers determined how many requests are made, and compared the average to how many requests came in between last November and early this March — when Zika outbreaks and government warnings were occurring in much of Latin America.
     
    They found twice as many request from Brazil and Ecuador as normally occur, and nearly double in Venezuela and Honduras.
     
    The overall number of requests to the abortion service, while far higher than expected, is tiny compared with the number of abortions thought to be performed. The number of requests from Brazil was about 1,200. Yet an estimated 1.4 million abortions are performed there every year, even though it is illegal.
     
    Some experts noted that the women who use this service may not be representative of women across the region because they have access to computers, they know about entities like Women on Web, and they may even have the resources to travel to get abortions.
     
     
    It's not clear whether poor women in rural areas — who tend to be more exposed to mosquitoes and are at a higher risk of infection — would be as likely to pursue abortions, said Paula Avila-Guillen, a program specialist at the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights. She was not involved in the research but works on abortion issues with people in Latin American countries.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Jean Chretien On The Election Warpath, Says Harper Has Shamed Canada

    Jean Chretien On The Election Warpath, Says Harper Has Shamed Canada
    Former Liberal prime minister Jean Chretien injected himself into the federal election campaign Saturday with a scathing critique of Stephen Harper's foreign policy.

    Jean Chretien On The Election Warpath, Says Harper Has Shamed Canada

    Indian-American Students Begin Business Incubator To Help Startups

    Indian-American Students Begin Business Incubator To Help Startups
    Westview High students Aman Sharma and Bhavin Gupta have already helped three startups through their Oregon Business Incubator

    Indian-American Students Begin Business Incubator To Help Startups

    Indian Man And His Pakistani Driving Instructor Face Trial In UAE On Graft Charges

    Indian Man And His Pakistani Driving Instructor Face Trial In UAE On Graft Charges
    The Indian bribed the Pakistani instructor 500 Dirhams ($136) to manipulate the number of lessons he took and clear him in five driving tests so that he could get a driving licence earlier.

    Indian Man And His Pakistani Driving Instructor Face Trial In UAE On Graft Charges

    'Dangerous' British Racist Man Gets Life Term For Trying To Behead Sikh Dentist Sarandev Bhambra

    'Dangerous' British Racist Man Gets Life Term For Trying To Behead Sikh Dentist Sarandev Bhambra
    Zack Davies, 26, regarded as a white supremacist inspired by IS executioner Jihadi John, was earlier jailed for 14 years for attacking Sarandev Bhambra

    'Dangerous' British Racist Man Gets Life Term For Trying To Behead Sikh Dentist Sarandev Bhambra

    Two Indian Haj Pilgrims Killed, 19 Injured In Makkah Grand Mosque Accident

    Two Indian Haj Pilgrims Killed, 19 Injured In Makkah Grand Mosque Accident
    Saudi authorities said late Saturday that Islam's annual haj pilgrimage won't be affected by Friday's crane collapse that killed 107 and injured 238 pilgrims at Makkah's Grand Mosque

    Two Indian Haj Pilgrims Killed, 19 Injured In Makkah Grand Mosque Accident

    Queen's India-Born Representative Resigns After Saying British Pakistanis Need To Learn Civility

    Queen's India-Born Representative Resigns After Saying British Pakistanis Need To Learn Civility
    Pakistanis are lovely people individually but there is a lot of work to do to teach them basic common courtesy and civility

    Queen's India-Born Representative Resigns After Saying British Pakistanis Need To Learn Civility