English flagItalian flagPortuguese flagFrench flagSpanish flagArabic flagRussian flagCzech flagCroatian flagHindi flagPolish flagRomanian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flagSlovenian flagUkrainian flagAlbanian flagEstonian flagHungarian flag

abortion-clinics.co.uk

All the private abortion clinics in UK, search nearest to you, UK abortion law, how is performed, contraception, sexual education.

Archive for January, 2010

U.S. Teen Pregnancy Rate Increases as Abortions Rise

After a Decade-Long Decline, U.S. Teen Pregnancy Rate Increases as Both Births and Abortions Rise

 A new data from the Guttmacher Institute said that the gap between blacks and hispanics has closed, but rates among both groups remain significantly higher than among non-hispanic whites.

“It coincides with an increase in rigid abstinence-only-until-marriage programs, which received major funding boosts under the Bush administration. A strong body of research shows that these programs do not work. Fortunately, the heyday of this failed experiment has come to an end with the enactment of a new teen pregnancy prevention initiative that ensures that programs will be age-appropriate, medically accurate and, most importantly, based on research demonstrating their effectiveness.” Heather Boonstra, Guttmacher Institute senior public policy associate says.

The teen pregnancy rate declined 41% between its peak, in 1990, and 2005 . Teen birth and abortion rates also declined, with births dropping 35% between 1991 and 2005 and teen abortion declining 56% between its peak, in 1988, and 2005. But all three trends reversed in 2006. In that year, there were 71.5 pregnancies per 1,000 women aged 15–19. Put another way, about 7% of teen girls became pregnant in 2006.

Just as the long-term declines in teen pregnancy occurred among all racial and ethnic groups through 2005, the reversal in 2006 also involved all demographic groups:

  • Among black teens, the pregnancy rate declined by 45% (from 223.8 per 1,000 in 1990 to 122.7 in 2005), before increasing to 126.3 in 2006.
  • Among Hispanic teens, the pregnancy rate decreased by 26% (from 169.7 per 1,000 in 1992 to 124.9 in 2005), before rising to 126.6 in 2006.
  • Among non-Hispanic white teens, the pregnancy rate declined 50% (from 86.6 per 1,000 in 1990 to 43.3 per 1,000 in 2005), before increasing to 44.0 in 2006.

Because the decline among black teens was so much greater than that among Hispanics, the long-standing gap between the two groups has disappeared. However, the gap between white teens and teens of color is as large as ever.

State-level data are not yet available for 2006, but varied widely in 2005. The highest pregnancy rates were in New Mexico (93 per 1,000 women 15–19), Nevada (90), Arizona (89), Texas (88) and Mississippi (85), and the lowest rates were in New Hampshire (33), Vermont (40), Maine (48), Minnesota (47) and North Dakota (46). Teen pregnancy rates declined in every state between 1988 and 2000, and in every state except North Dakota between 2000 and 2005.

“It is too soon to tell whether the increase in the teen pregnancy rate between 2005 and 2006 is a short term fluctuation, a more lasting stabilization or the beginning of a significant new trend, any of which would be of great concern,” says Lawrence Finer, Guttmacher’s director of domestic research. “Either way, it is clearly time to redouble our efforts to make sure our young people have the information, interpersonal skills and health services they need to prevent unwanted pregnancies and to become sexually healthy adults..”


My pregnancy test turned positive what do I do?

If your pregnancy tests results turn out be positive then it’s time to consider your options. You have three choices, continue with the pregnancy, continue with the pregnancy and consider adoption or foster care, or end the pregnancy through abortion.


The first challenge to Ireland’s abortion laws in more than 15 years

Three Irish women who say the effective ban on abortion in Ireland violates the European Convention on Human Rights has been brought the legal action. All three have travelled to Britain to have abortions. They argue that being forced to travel abroad for abortions endangered their “health and well-being” as safeguarded by the European Convention on Human Rights.

Two leading lawyers has been engaged by the Irish to argue its case that the country has a sovereign right to protect the life of the unborn.

Abortion is illegal in Ireland, a deeply Catholic country, unless the life of the woman is in danger.

The Irish constitution was amended in 1983 to include the “Pro-Life Amendment”, which asserted that the unborn child had an explicit right to life from conception.

In the past 30 years almost 140,000 Irish women have travelled to Britain to have abortions.

 

Source: BBC