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Press release – Complications from Abortions (Annual Report) Bill receives First Reading in House of Lords

Press release - Complications from Abortions (Annual Report) Bill receives First Reading in House of Lords

PRESS RELEASE – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Press release – Lord Moylan’s Complications from Abortions (Annual Report) Bill receives First Reading in House of Lords

04 September 2024 – Lord Moylan’s Complications from Abortions (Annual Report) Bill received its First Reading in the House of Lords yesterday afternoon.

The Bill proposes a change to the law that would require the Department of Health and Social Care to publish an annual report on medical complications from abortions. 

This annual report would include more comprehensive reporting of abortion complications, along the lines of what was published in a Department of Health and Social Care review released in November 2023. 

This Government review, which was described as a “one-time analysis”, revealed that abortion complication rates are likely much higher than has been previously reported in the annual abortion statistics, which are based on reporting from abortion providers.

The change to the law would require a similar report to be published each year. The annual report would be required to include data from Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), which are not currently published in the annual abortion statistics complication data reporting.

Government review shows abortion complication rates likely much higher than being reported by abortion providers

Government data shows there is an urgent need to review the reporting of complications.

The review published in November 2023, undertaken by the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID), analysed Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) for England from the years 2017 to 2021. It compared the complication rate derived from this analysis to the currently reported complications rate derived from the Abortion Notification System (ANS) that relies on data provided by abortion providers, and which is reported in the annual abortion statistics.

The review found the ANS-derived data shows an average complication rate over the 5 years from 2017-2021 of 1.52 per 1,000 abortions whereas their analysis of HES data over the same period showed a complication rate of 4.06, over 2.6 times higher than the ANS data that is reported in the annual abortion statistics. 

When their HES data analysis also included incomplete abortions, the complication rate over the same period was 18.16, which is over 11.9 times higher than the ANS-derived complication rate that does not include incomplete abortions.

An incomplete abortion occurs when some of the unborn baby or pregnancy tissue is left inside the womb of the mother after an abortion. The Department of Health and Social Care states that “incomplete abortions are usually characterised by complications such as bleeding and abdominal pain”. The omission of incomplete abortions from current reporting therefore means the complication rate resulting from abortions is being underestimated at the moment.

The difference in reported complications rate was much higher for women under 20 than for the general population. For women under 20, the HES-derived complication rate was 4.43 times higher than the ANS-derived complication rate, compared to 2.67 times higher for the general population. When the HES data analysis also included incomplete abortion, for under 20s the HES-derived complication rate was 17.43 times higher than the ANS-derived complication rate, compared to 11.95 times for the general population.

The review also identified that abortion providers were not recording complications that happened after discharge or after the form that they were recorded on was sent to the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC). The OHID noted that there was “no evidence” when the review was undertaken in 2022 that abortion providers were informing the (DHSC) to ensure the data was updated when a woman informed the abortion provider about a complication that occurred after the form had been sent. 

The review also noted that complications may be less likely to be recorded for terminations where either both or one of the abortion medications is administered at home, because it is unlikely that the person filling in the HSA4 form will know if the woman experienced a complication following an abortion.

Spokesperson for Right To Life UK, Catherine Robinson, said:

“A Government review published last year revealed that abortion complication rates are likely much higher than has been previously reported in the annual abortion statistics, which are based on reporting from abortion providers”.

“The new Government needs to urgently introduce measures to ensure that abortion complications data is accurately collected and reliably reported on”. 

“While it is rare for Lords Private Members’ Bills to become law, this Bill will ensure that the issue of complication rate underreporting is put on the radar and debated extensively in Parliament, the media and wider society. This will help raise the profile of this major issue and put pressure on the Government to ensure that abortion complications data is accurately collected and reliably reported on”.

ENDS