ohne said:
Abortions that are carried out without direct medical supervision such as through RU486 are dangerous. If something goes wrong then there is nothing immediately there to assist the woman unlike with surgical procedures. I think what has also been failed to be raised in this debate is that in around 1 in 10 cases of taking RU486, the woman will need to have a surgical procedure done anyway afterwards due to complications.
Judging by the figures for the drug... risk is fairly acceptable and appropriate guidelines for medical intervention would be manageable
the figures are (US) 7.9% and (French) 4.5% for surgical intervention for 600mg RU486 (mifepristone)
from a US trial of 762 and French trial of 1605 women.. adjusted for ethnicity
US trial:
(1.6%) were medically indicated interventions during the study period, mostly for excessive bleeding;
(0.6%) interventions occurred at the patient's request;
(4.7%) had incomplete abortions at the end of the study protocol
(1.0%) had ongoing pregnancies at the end of the study protocol
mainly there is indication that 1 in 20 would be incomplete
u cant obviously use this in certain pregnancies.. ectopic or ppl with haemorrhagic conditions etc.
bleeding heavier was the main side effect.. based on the drugs pharmacodynamics this is consistant.. control with medication lead to an acceptable level of bleeding without surgical intervention
Cost of drug is about AUD$300 without govt subsidies.
ohne said:
While I find the idea of surgical abortions also abhorrent, RU486 will be even worse leading to sickness and bleeding for women drawn out over several days and babies being born in toilets.
well considering that they need to use this within 49 days of conception... being born is unlikely...
the bleeding and spotting would last about 9-16 days on average.. not too unacceptable by social standards... compared to spotting from the pill
ohne said:
there are some issues that related to all abortions. For example research has shown that an abortion significantly increases the risk of breast cancer for women.
I recall u are talking about 1991 and 1994 papers...
this was a meta-analysis study scrutinising over the claims made from the earlier study.. it was a comprehensive overview of all works..
one factor was recall bias of patients with breast cancer..
Evidence-based Obstetrics & Gynecology said:
CONCLUSION Retrospective studies of induced abortion provide misleading results, probably because of differential reporting of abortion between cases and controls. Based on the combined results of prospective studies, women with a history of spontaneous or induced abortion are not at increased risk of breast cancer.
Women with a history of spontaneous or induced abortion are not at increased risk of breast cancer -- a meta-analysis
Andrieu N - Evidence-based Obstetrics & Gynecology. - June 2005; 7(2); 98-99
Also a pathological mechanism was quite weak... and in medicine.. usually if they are weak they arent completely accurate.