Mental health issues more common after abortion

The Christian Post: Women who have abortions face an “increased risk of mental health-related hospitalisation” compared to those who carry their pregnancies to term, according to a recent study.

Last month, the Journal of Psychiatric Research published a study by researchers with the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre, University of Sherbrooke and McGill University, titled “Induced abortion and implications for long-term mental health: a cohort study of 1.2 million pregnancies.”

Researchers oversaw a retrospective cohort study of 28,721 induced abortions and approximately 1.22 million births at hospitals in Quebec, Canada, between 2006 and 2022.

They followed up with women after their pregnancies to identify any mental health-related hospitalizations to see if there was a link between induced abortion and hospitalisation.

According to the study, “abortion is associated with an increased risk of mental health-related hospitalization in the long term, but the association weakens with time.”

“Rates of mental health-related hospitalisation were higher following induced abortions than other pregnancies,” noted the report, adding that women who had abortions experienced higher rates of “substance use disorders” and “suicide attempts” when “compared with other pregnancies.”

“The associations were greater for patients who had preexisting mental illness,” or were younger than 25 at the time of their abortion.  

David Reardon, director of the Elliot Institute, a pro-life organisation, said in a statement released last week that the study was the most recent confirmation of a link between abortion and severe mental health problems.

“This is the latest in a string of record-based studies that do not suffer from any self-selection or recall bias. Plus, the authors fully controlled for women’s mental health histories before and after their abortions,” said Reardon.

“They found that prior mental health problems clearly magnify the risk that abortion will exacerbate the risk of a psychiatric crisis, but there [was] also elevated risks for women with no prior mental health issues.”

Reardon went on to note that while “it is difficult to know when, if ever, abortion may be the sole cause of any mental health problem,” it was also “ridiculous to assert that abortion never contributes to mental health issues.”

“We now know that the majority of abortion patients say that their abortions did negatively impact their mental health. To insist that abortion never impacts mental health is, essentially … an absurd, ideologically driven fantasy,” he added.

In 2023, BMC Psychiatry, an open-access, peer-reviewed journal, published an analysis of 15 papers that found, overall, 34.5% of women worldwide who had an abortion experienced depression.

“In conclusion, the occurrence of post-abortion depression has been observed to be widespread globally,” stated the 2023 study. “Healthcare providers should prioritize the provision of post-abortion counseling, care, and emotional support to women.”

This article first appeared at The Christian Post and is reproduced here under their Fair Use policy.

Abortion law around Australia

In Australia, abortion law varies from state to state or territory. On this page we have listed the laws for each jurisdiction and listed the pertinent sections of each law. Where exclusion-zones exist to prevent pro-life people from helping mothers near an abortion business, those are also noted.

To find support services for each state, as well as Australia-wide services, please go to our Pro-life Supports page.

Click on the jurisdiction below to jump to the desired law:

Tasmania abortion law

Reproductive Health Act 2013

  • On demand to 16 weeks.
  • From 16-20 weeks, two doctors must agree to the termination; one of these can be the abortionist.
  • After 20 weeks to full term, a panel of specialists must agree to the abortion.
  • Chemical abortions to 9 weeks of pregnancy
    • available via telehealth
  • Currently no doctors in Tasmania provide abortions past 14 weeks, so women wanting an abortion past this date must travel to the mainland.
  • Travel costs may be offset by the government, meaning that taxpayers fund this cost.
  • Pro-life doctors are forced by law to help a mother procure her abortion by sending her to a pro-abortion doctor.
  • 150m exclusion-zones operate around abortion providers

Victoria abortion law

Abortion Law Reform Act 2008

  • On demand to 24 weeks.
  • After 24 weeks to full term, two doctors must agree to the abortion.
  • Pro-life doctors are forced by law to help a mother procure her abortion by sending her to a pro-abortion doctor.
  • Chemical abortions to 9 weeks of pregnancy
    • available via telehealth
  • 150m exclusion-zones operate around abortion providers (Public Health and Wellbeing Act 2008)

New South Wales abortion law

Abortion Law Reform Act 2019

  • On demand to 22 weeks
  • After 22 weeks to full term, a specialist doctor must agree to the abortion
  • After 22 weeks, mothers must be offered information about counselling
  • Pro-life doctors are forced by law to help a mother procure her abortion by sending her to a pro-abortion doctor.
  • Chemical abortions can be prescribed by nurse practitioners and endorsed midwives
  • 150m exclusion-zones apply

Australian Capital Territory

Health Act 1993

  • Available for free to residents of the ACT.
  • Chemical abortions up to 9 weeks of pregnancy
  • Surgical abortions on demand to 16 weeks of pregnancy
  • After 16 weeks with doctor’s approval
  • Long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs) are also free
  • Chemical abortions can be prescribed by a GP, nurse practitioner, endorsed midwife or via telehealth service
  • No mandatory counselling
  • Pro-life doctors are NOT required to refer a woman to a doctor who is in favour of abortion
  • 50 metre exclusion zones operate

Western Australia

Abortion Legislation Reform Act 2023

  • Abortion is legal to full term
    • under 9 weeks, a GP, nurse practitioner or midwife can prescribe a chemical abortion
    • from 9 weeks to 23 weeks, GP must refer to an abortion provider
    • from 23 weeks, 2 doctors must agree to the abortion
  • A pro-life doctor, nurse practitioner or midwife must refer a patient to a practitioner who will arrange the abortion
  • Girls under the age of 18. may be able to procure an abortion without parental consent
  • 150 m exclusion-zones in operation

Northern Territory

Termination of Pregnancy Law reform Act 2017

  • Chemical abortion to 9 weeks gestation
  • 9-23 weeks gestation: surgical abortion in a hospital
  • Over 23 weeks, two doctors must agree to the abortion
  • A pro-life doctor must refer a patient to one who will arrange an abortion within 2 working days of the consultation

Queensland

Termination of Pregnancy Bill 2018

  • On demand to 22 weeks
  • After 22 weeks, two doctors must agree to the abortion
  • Chemical abortions to 9 weeks gestation
  • Chemical abortions can be prescribed by doctors, nurse practitioners, endorsed midwives and some registered nurses and midwives
  • Doctors with a conscientious objection must refer to another doctor who will arrange the abortion
  • 150 m exclusion-zones in operation

South Australia

Termination of Pregnancy Act 2021

  • On demand to 22 weeks and 6 days gestation
  • After 23 weeks, 2 doctors must agree to the abortion
  • Chemical abortions to 9 weeks via GP or teleheath
  • Pro-life doctors must give abortion-minded mothers a government-produced brochure which explains how they can procure an abortion
  • Data is collected in South Australia and all abortions must be reported to the Chief Executive of the Department for Health and Wellbeing within 20 days of the end of the month
  • 150m exclusion-zones in operation

HLPS 2025 conference report by Wes Bredenof

Pastor Wes Bredenof attended our recent conference and wrote this report for his blog. Wes has graciously allowed HLPS to reproduce his conference report here on our website.

This past Saturday I attended a pro-life conference in Hobart.  It was organized by the Human Life Protection Society of Tasmania.  About 100 people gathered to hear a variety of speakers from across Australia drawing attention to the important issue of abortion.  Let me just summarize some of the take-aways.

Several speakers drew attention to the scale of the problem here in Australia and globally.  Here in Australia, at least 89,000 unborn children are murdered every year.  Some of those are born alive and then left to die.  Around the world, the numbers are staggering.  Every year, millions of unborn children have their lives extinguished before they see the light of day.  It is the greatest human rights atrocity in history. 

Two women (Anne Sherston and Anouska Firth) shared their personal experiences with abortion.  Anne’s story involved coercion.  She did not have a choice.  Anouska’s story involved fear and addiction.  She had grown up in a pro-life family, knew abortion was wrong, but had two anyway.  These stories tell us that we can’t assume everyone who has had an abortion has done so for the same reason or under the same circumstances. 

A third takeaway has to do with the spiritual nature of the issue.  When I was involved in a campus pro-life organization in my university days, the constitution of our organization prevented us from speaking about this in our activism.  We had to argue for the pro-life cause on the basis of humanist arguments.  At this conference, there was a consistent recognition from every speaker that, at base, we’re dealing something related to rebellion against God.  Now, having said that, most of the speakers were Roman Catholic.  If we dig deeper, I suspect my agreement with their analysis is only going to go so far.  When it comes to the answers, we might use some of the same language, but we’ll fill that language with quite different meanings.  Nonetheless, I was encouraged to hear so many pro-life advocates recognize that the heart of the issue is the human heart — and the need to bathe all our activism in prayer.

We were also reminded of the strong connection between sexual license and murder/death.  Anouska Firth spoke of how the Old Testament Israelites practiced idol worship.  This idol worship often involved sexual acts.  Then the same idol worship (particularly with Molech) demanded child-sacrifice.  The names today have changed, but the picture is much the same.  Children must die so people can have unfettered sex lives.

Finally, one of the speakers was from Armadale, Western Australia.  Mandy Bowen made special mention of the Worthy Hands Café, which is operated by the Free Reformed Eucalypt Association.  Worthy Hands employs people with special needs from the Free Reformed church community.  Mandy mentioned how she thought it was beautiful that the parents of those who work there saw their kids as a gift to be embraced, rather than a problem to be erased.  So true!

This conference was a good reminder that abortion continues to be a massive evil blight on Australia and other nations.  It encouraged me, in the words of Bruce Cockburn, to keep on “kicking at the darkness until it bleeds daylight.”  God’s justice demands we speak up for the weakest and most vulnerable members of our society.  As Anouska Firth said, “Silence is complicity.”  We must speak and do what we can to effect change.

by Wes Bredenof.

Wes Bredenof is a Canadian-born pastor who currently serves the Free Reformed Church of Launceston, Tasmania. He writes at Bredenof.ca

Memorial of Mercy for Babies Lost through Abortion

In December 2015, Pope Francis declared 2016 to be a Jubilee Year of Mercy. The Catholic Women’s League Tasmania Inc. (CWL) responded by submitting a proposal to Archbishop Julian Porteous to establish a memorial to unborn babies lost through abortion. The location selected was consecrated land at St John’s Church, Richmond Tasmania.

Catholic Women’s League Tasmania Inc. (CWL) represent Catholic women across the state of Tasmania. As a pro-life group, the League has found abortion to be a divisive, polarizing, emotive and moral issue but they have continued to lobby and educate politicians, write submissions, publish letters in newspapers and voice their concern in the community.

memorial

Local sculptor Ben Tolhurst was commissioned to shape and form the memorial in marble and granite. CWL set the parameters; a newborn baby wrapped in a blanket that cascaded down the front of a plinth, with its tiny head resting comfortably on a pillow and eyes gently closed. This sculpture represents a baby – secure, loved and resting in peace in God’s care.

An unexpected outcome of the memorial was the donation of money to purchase two locally built seats, one in memory of Margaret Sykes and the other Senator Brian Harradine, both tireless pro-life advocates.

The Memorial is built on church grounds accessible to anyone of any faith or no faith who is experiencing grief from a termination. They come to pray, contemplate, reflect and find peace and healing.

On July 3 2017, the memorial was blessed by Rev Father Micheal Tate accompanied by St John’s Parish Priest, Father Terry Rush.

Prayer cards are available in St John’s Church, Richmond. An image of the Memorial graces the cover with the words:

In memory of children lost to us through abortion now in God’s care.

On the back of the card is a prayer written by Noel Roberts, a Catholic pro-life activist.

“Watch over the stirrings of life in the womb
And bring it to fruition.
May it suffer no untimely birth at nature’s whim
nor violence at our hands.
Let every human life show forth the Creator’s love
and strengthen the human family.
Made in Your image, let each child thrive and
come to fullness in due time”

Abortion: World’s Leading Cause of Death in 2024

As 2025 kicks in, it has been revealed that abortion was the leading cause of death globally in 2024, with over 45 million unborn children killed in the womb in 2024.

The startling information was provided by Worldometer, a reference website recognised by the American Library Association for it’s comprehensive global statistics. The website reported that 45,129,912 abortions had been performed worldwide as of noon on New Years Eve.

This figure represents 42% of all deaths globally for the year, compared to 62.5 million total deaths from all other causes.

By comparison, cancer claimed 8.2 million lives, smoking resulted in 5 million deaths, HIV/Aids accounted for 1.7 million deaths, traffic accidents caused 1.35 million fatalities and suicide resulted in 1.1 million deaths. Abortions in 2024 outnumbered the combined deaths from cancer, malaria, HIV/Aids, smoking, alcohol and traffic fatalities, demonstrating the magnitude of the procedure’s global impact.

Worldometer’s abortion statistics are drawn from the latest figures provided by the World Health Organisation. The organisation tracks global health data, including abortions, as part of its mandate to monitor public health trends.

Extract from Gloriel Howard at Resist the Mainstream