Conference Coverage

Abortion restrictions linked to less evidence-based care for miscarriages


 

AT ACOG 2023

Institutional policies had the strongest impact

Before accounting for the state a hospital was in, 27% of institutions with restrictive abortion policies looked at more than imaging in determining how to proceed, compared with 88% of institutions without abortion restrictions that included clinical judgment and patient preferences in their management.

After controlling for state policies and affiliation with a family planning training program or a religious entity, the odds of an institution relying solely on imaging guidelines were over 12 times greater for institutions with abortion restrictions or bans (odds ratio, 12.3; 95% confidence interval, 3.2-47.9). Specifically, the odds were 9 times greater for institutions with restrictions and 27 times greater for institutions with bans.

Only 12% of the institutions without restrictions relied solely on ultrasound criteria, compared with 67% of the institutions with restrictions and 82% of the institutions that banned all abortions except to save the life of the pregnant individual (P < .001).

Only one in four (25%) of the programs with institutional abortion restrictions used mifepristone, compared with 86% of unrestricted programs (P < .001), and 40% of programs with institutional abortion restrictions used office-based aspiration, compared with 81% of unrestricted programs (P < .001).

Without access to all evidence-based treatments, doctors are often forced to choose expectant management for miscarriages. “So you’re kind of forced to have them to pass the pregnancy at home, which can be traumatic for patients” if that’s not what they wanted, Dr. Phillips said.

Dr. Flink-Bochacki further noted that this patient population is already particularly vulnerable.

“Especially for patients with early pregnancy loss, it’s such a feeling of powerlessness already, so the mental state that many of these patients are in is already quite fraught,” Dr. Flink-Bochacki said. “Then to not even have power to choose the interventions that you want or to be able to access interventions in a timely fashion because you’re being held to some arbitrary guideline further takes away the power and further exacerbates the trauma of the experience.”

The biggest factor likely driving the reduced access to those interventions is the fear that the care could be confused with providing an abortion instead of simply managing a miscarriage, Dr. Flink-Bochacki said. “I think that’s why a lot of these programs don’t have mifepristone and don’t offer outpatient uterine aspiration,” she said. “Because those are so widely used in abortion and the connotation is with abortion, they’re just kind of steering clear of it, but meanwhile, patients with pregnancy loss are suffering because they’re being unnecessarily restrictive.”

The research did not use any external funding, and the authors and Dr. Heuser had no disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Experts outline comprehensive preeclampsia prevention strategy
MDedge Family Medicine
The nation’s health secretary has this obstetrician on call
MDedge Family Medicine
Transcranial magnetic stimulation during pregnancy: An alternative to antidepressant treatment?
MDedge Family Medicine
Early gestational diabetes treatment may improve neonatal outcomes
MDedge Family Medicine
Gestational HTN, preeclampsia worsen long-term risk for ischemic, nonischemic heart failure
MDedge Family Medicine
Over half of pregnant patients not properly screened for thyroid disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Once-daily nifedipine sufficient for hypertension in pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
Scheduled bleeding may boost tolerability of hormone implants
MDedge Family Medicine
Maternal health clinic teams with legal services to aid patients
MDedge Family Medicine
First prospective study finds pregnancies with Sjögren’s to be largely safe
MDedge Family Medicine