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niyad

(133,085 posts)
Tue Jun 28, 2016, 11:34 AM Jun 2016

History of Abortion in the U.S. [View all]

(lengthy, excellent read)

History of Abortion in the U.S.


Women around the world have used abortion to control their reproduction at every point in history, and in every known society — regardless of its legality.





In the United States, abortion was widely practiced before about 1880, by which time most states had banned it except to save the life of the woman. Anti-abortion legislation was part of a backlash against the growing movements for suffrage and birth control — an effort to control women and confine them to a traditional childbearing role.

This legislation was also a way for the medical profession to tighten its control over women’s health care, as midwives who performed abortions were a threat to the male medical establishment. Finally, with the declining birthrate among women from Northern European backgrounds in the late 1800s, the U.S. government and the eugenics movement were concerned about “race suicide” and wanted white U.S.-born women to reproduce.

. . . .
Laws prohibiting abortion subjected women to desperation, fear, and shame, and took a heavy toll on women’s lives and health. Poor women and women of color suffered disproportionately, as the ability of a woman to obtain an abortion, let alone one that was safe, often depended upon her economic situation, her race, and where she lived. Women with money could sometimes leave the country or find a physician who would perform the procedure for a high fee. Poor women, for the most part, were either at the mercy of incompetent practitioners with questionable motives or unable to find anyone who would perform the procedure. Many attempted dangerous self-abortions, such as inserting knitting needles or coat hangers into the vagina and uterus, douching with solutions such as lye, or swallowing strong drugs or chemicals.

Because many deaths were not officially attributed to unsafe, illegal abortion, it’s impossible to know the exact number of lives lost. However, thousands of women a year were treated for health complications due to botched, unsanitary, or self-induced abortions, and many died. Others were left infertile or with chronic illness and pain.


Wherever abortion is illegal, committed people take enormous risks to provide safe abortions clandestinely, to treat women who have complications, and to help women find safe providers. Before the Supreme Court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in 1973, some dedicated and well-trained physicians and other medical practitioners risked imprisonment, fines, and loss of their medical licenses to provide abortions. Information about these services often spread by word of mouth.

. . . .

http://www.ourbodiesourselves.org/health-info/u-s-abortion-history/

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Having read Roe v Wade for a college course, it was quite interesting what it was about uppityperson Jun 2016 #1
indeed niyad Jun 2016 #2
I always thought there was some of that in the argument... Wounded Bear Jun 2016 #19
Even wealthy women couldn't always obtain safe procedures REP Jun 2016 #24
Marking for later read. History of abortion. underpants Jun 2016 #3
read the american med assoc one as well. niyad Jun 2016 #4
K&R Solly Mack Jun 2016 #5
Thank you for sharing this. So important. lapislzi Jun 2016 #6
blushing here, and thank you. right back to you!! niyad Jun 2016 #9
K&R for history, and the truth that it's all about control. Brickbat Jun 2016 #7
A few months ago... Orrex Jun 2016 #8
thank you for linking to that piece. niyad Jun 2016 #10
Pound for pound it was the best pro-choice argument I've ever heard (nt) Orrex Jun 2016 #11
I love katha pollitt niyad Jun 2016 #12
Good overview, especially the later attempts to weaken abortion rights, but it leaves out any FailureToCommunicate Jun 2016 #13
thank you for that additional, and valuable, information. niyad Jun 2016 #14
De nada FailureToCommunicate Jun 2016 #17
the history of abortion in this country is most interesting. niyad Jun 2016 #18
Just downloaded this the other day, kiva Jun 2016 #15
thank you so much. apparently, it is pissing off the woman-hating gestational slavers, so niyad Jun 2016 #16
K&R! The first edition of that book was given to all female freshmen at my college. Rhiannon12866 Jun 2016 #20
The connection between banning abortion and eugenics is one of those dirty little secrets... Odin2005 Jun 2016 #21
well, it never occurs to the anti-intelligentsia that some of us actually know how to read, niyad Jun 2016 #22
. . . . niyad Jun 2016 #23
This ismnotwasm Jun 2016 #25
I hope so, as well. niyad Jun 2016 #26
Husband's Aunt had a "Therapeutic Abortion" in NYC HockeyMom Jun 2016 #27
I am glad that she was able to get one, though. niyad Jun 2016 #28
Interesting topic - a theory was floated about missing socialite Dorothy Arnold, closeupready Jun 2016 #29
In 1880, abortions were septic and a lot of women were dying Warpy Jun 2016 #30
oh, they understand. but women have to be kept under control. niyad Jun 2016 #31
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