Springfield, IL (August 13, 2008)
- The credibility of a new report on the mental health effects of abortion
from the American Psychological Association is tarnished by the fact that
the lead author, Dr. Brenda Major, has violated the APA's own data sharing
rules by consistently refusing to allow her own data on abortion and mental
health effects to be reanalyzed by other researchers.
Major, a proponent of abortion
rights, has even evaded a request from the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) to deliver copies of data she collected under a federal
grant. Because her study of emotional reactions two years after an abortion
was federally funded, the data she collected is actually federal property.
But in response to a 2004 HHS request for a copy of the data, Major excused
herself from delivering the data, writing, "It would be very difficult to
pull this information together."
However, a researcher familiar
with Major's work, David Reardon of the Elliot Institute, has seen portions
of Major's unpublished findings. Reardon, who has published over a dozen
studies on abortion and mental health, believes Major is withholding the
data to prevent her findings, which support a link between abortion and
subsequent mental health problems, from coming to light.
"Major's last published study
using this data set was released in 2000, after she moved to her present
facility in 1995," Reardon said. "Immediately after that publication, one of
my colleagues requested a break down of details which had only been
superficially summarized in one her tables. One of her grad students replied
on her behalf with the requested statistics within 48 hours. So it clearly
wasn't at all difficult for her team to access the data. Plus, with modern
electronic data bases and multiple backup procedures in place at
universities like hers, it is nearly impossible to lose such data."
According to Reardon, Major has
not responded to any further requests regarding the data since early in
2000.
"I know of a number of experts in
the field who have requested the data, even within the last six months," he
said. "But she simply doesn't respond to their calls, emails, or letters."
Reardon said that Major's refusal
to respond "is very troubling on two counts."
"First, the APA's own ethics rule–8.14–requires
research psychologists to share their data for verification of findings," he
said. "Secondly, Major is the chair of the APA Abortion Task Force which is,
at least in theory, supposed to bring full and clear light to this issue.
But how can we trust the objectivity of a report prepared by a task force
composed exclusively of pro-choice psychologists, especially when the chair
and lead author has a history of withholding data and findings which may
undermine her ideological preferences?"
According to Reardon, the
additional details from Major's study published in 2000 actually revealed
that a significant number of women interviewed by Major did attribute
negative reactions to their abortions–but
those findings have never been published.
"There is no doubt that she has
selectively reported her findings," Reardon said. "We have seen in the
unpublished tables details about specific negative reactions which were
obscured in her published report by combining them with three to eight other
reactions to create watered down, composite scores."
He added that he felt it was
irresponsible not to report the significant findings associated with
individual symptoms.
"For example, Major found that a
number of women reported that they tried to cope with negative feelings
about their abortions by drinking more or taking drugs," Reardon said. "But
she has never not fully shared the details on these reactions in any of her
published studies, and by refusing to share her data for reanalysis by
others, she has prevented anyone else from reporting these findings either."
Reardon believes that the newly
released report from the APA Task Force on Mental Health and Abortion is
also flawed by a pattern of wording and reporting that tends to obscure,
rather than clarify, what researchers have found about the mental health
effects associated with abortion. The primary conclusion of the report, as
highlighted in the APA news release, is that "[t]here is no credible
evidence that a single elective abortion of an unwanted pregnancy in and of
itself causes mental health problems for adult women…"
According to Reardon, this
nuanced statement is intended to convey a message that abortion has no
mental health risks. But, he says, those familiar with the literature will
see the Task Force actually admits that there is compelling evidence that
there are negative effects for:
-
women who have multiple
abortions, which accounts for about half of all abortions);
-
women who abort of a wanted
pregnancy because of coercion or pressure to abort from third parties
and may account for about 20-60% of all abortions;
-
minors who have abortions;
and
-
women with preexisting mental
health problems in which case abortion may not "in and of itself" be the
sole cause of mental health problems but may instead trigger or
aggravate preexisting problems.
"Even the modifier that there is
'no credible evidence' of mental health risks for low-risk abortion patients
is an admission that there is indeed some evidence that a single abortion
can pose a risk to the mental health of an emotionally stable adult woman,"
Reardon said. "In fact, the report itself identifies a whole host of studies
providing such evidence, but it mutes a clear presentation of the findings
of these studies by focusing on the limitations of each study's methodology,
which all studies have, in order to justify ignoring their clear
implications."
While Reardon agrees that the
body of the report includes admissions that abortion does negatively impact
some women, he is deeply concerned that the summary, introduction and
conclusion of the report, as well as the press releases issued to the media,
all fail to emphasize five key points that are clear in the literature and
even explicitly or implicitly stated within the 91-page Task Force report.
The five points Reardon believes
should be made, without room for controversy are:
-
Some women suffer emotional
harm from abortion.
-
Some women feel pressured
into unwanted abortions.
-
There are well established
risk factors identifying the women most likely to suffer negative
psychological factors to abortion, including being pressured into an
abortion, and that it is incumbent on therapists treating women
considering an abortion, and abortion clinics, to screen for these risk
factors and to give appropriate counseling in light of any identified
risk factors.
-
A nationally funded
longitudinal prospective study (such as recommended by Koop in 1989) of
psychological factors related to reproductive health (including
abortion) is long overdue and should be undertaken as soon as possible.
-
Therapists should be alert to
unresolved issues associated with a past abortion and should sensitively
give women the opportunity to discuss such issues and should provide
appropriate care or referrals whenever such issues are raised.
"By failing to call on therapists
to be alert and sensitive to the negative emotional experiences women
attribute to their abortions, the Task Force has allowed ideology to trump
sensitivity," Reardon said. "Instead, they are ignoring the reality of how
and why abortions take place and are instead focused on drawing conclusions
regarding the safety of abortion for an emotionally stable, pro-choice,
adult woman who is freely choosing a wanted abortion without any moral
qualms. But that doesn't reflect the reality of most abortion situations."
Reardon noted that studies show
that over 60 percent of American women are having abortions, often against
their moral beliefs, because they feel pressured into it by third parties;
and that over 70 percent do not receive the appropriate counseling to make a
free decision.
"These women need counselors and family members to be open to and responsive
to their pain, not dismissive of it as an anomaly," he said. "Women facing
unplanned pregnancies need professionals who will be aware of the risks of
abortion and the realities that the women might be facing, and help them
find meaningful resources and support. Sadly, the APA report is an
ideological report that simply ignores the concerns and needs of those women
for whom abortion is or has been a heartache, rather than a real choice."
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