Are Abortions Coerced? 

People assume that women freely choose abortion and that they are satisfied that it was the best decision for themselves. However, more and more peer-reviewed studies are being published which show that this is not the case. One recent study found that:  

Only 1/3 of abortions are “wanted.” 

1 in 4 women describe their abortion as “unwanted” or “coerced.” 

43% described their abortion as “accepted” but “inconsistent with their values and preferences.” 

60% said their preference would have been to give birth, if they had received more emotional support or had greater financial security.(1)

Feeling Pressured to Abort?

For free documents explaining your legal rights as a pregnant woman, please visit Center Against Forced Abortion:

“The noted feminist scholar Germaine Greer has criticized the pro-abortion campaign, writing: 

‘What women ‘won’ was the right to undergo invasive procedures in order to terminate unwanted pregnancies, unwanted not just by them but by their parents, their sexual partners, the governments who would not support mothers, the employers who would not employ mothers, the landlords who would not accept tenants with children, the schools who would not accept students with children. . . . If the child is unwanted, whether by her or her partner or parents, it will be her duty to undergo an invasive procedure and an emotional trauma and so sort the situation out. The crowning insult is that this ordeal is represented to her as some kind of a privilege. Her sad and onerous duty is garbed in the rhetoric of a civil right. Where other people decide that a woman’s baby should not be born she will be pressured to carry out her duty to herself, to the fetus, to other people, to the health establishment, to the state by undergoing abortion. Her autonomy is the least important consideration. In both cases she is confronted by people who know better than she what she ought to do.’ ”(8)

Sources

Are Abortions Coerced? 

(1) Reardon, David, et al. “The Effects of Abortion Decision Rightness and Decision Type on Women’s Satisfaction and Mental Health.” Cureus, 11 May 2023, https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.38882.