Sixty Percent of Russian Pregnancies End in Abortion


(This article courtesy of Steven Ertelt and the Pro-Life Infonet email newsletter. For more information or to subscribe go to www.prolifeinfo.org or email infonet@prolifeinfo.org.)



Moscow, Russia — About 60 percent of all pregnancies in Russia end in

abortion, and another 10 percent of pregnant women lose unborn children

because of health problems, the nation's chief gynecologist said Friday.

Russia ranks second in the world behind Romania in the number of abortions

per capita, Vladimir Kulakov, the head of the Scientific Center for

Obstetrics and Gynecology, said at a news conference.

Girls in Russia under 18 account for every tenth abortion, he said. Doctors

say the use of contraception is less widespread in Russia than in the West.

Of some 38 million women of childbearing age, about 6 million are infertile,

and medical authorities consider abortions a major cause of infertility,

Kulakov said.

He said about half the women who bear children in Russia do not get enough

nourishment or vitamins during pregnancy, and that 58.8 percent of all

newborns last year were born with illnesses.

Federal programs to provide pregnant women with additional food and vitamins have been thwarted by a lack of funds. Financial problems have also stalled

use of new medical technologies that would help high-risk expectant mothers,

Kulakov said.

“Budget spending on health protection is increasing year after year, but is

clearly insufficient,” he said.

The 1991 Soviet collapse and the ensuing economic turmoil has led to the

disintegration of the Soviet-era state health care system – a key factor

behind Russia's population decline. According to the State Statistics

Committee's latest estimate, Russia's population has declined by about 4

million to 143.4 million since 1989.

Health statistics have improved in recent years as the Russian economy has

registered several successive years of growth.

The infant mortality dropped from 19.3 deaths per every 1,000 babies under

age 1 in 1993, to 14.6 last year, said Larisa Gavrilova, a deputy chief of

the maternity department of the Russian Health Ministry. That was still twice

as high as in the United States, where 6.9 out of every 1,000 infants died

before their first birthday in 2000.

The number of women who died during delivery also decreased from 50 per

100,000 births in 1997 to 36.5 last year, Gavrilova said told the ITAR-Tass

news agency.

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