Surgical abortion and the link to physician procedures

Surgical abortion and the link to physician procedures
© iStock/September15

According to new research published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, physician procedure volume is linked to outcomes after surgical abortion.

Although surgically induced abortion is a low-risk procedure, women whose physician infrequently performs it have almost twice the risk of severe complications.

What do you know about surgical abortions?

“A physician who performs more procedures, regularly, most likely gains proficiency, as well as the ability to recognize and troubleshoot potential problems,” say Ms. Ning Liu and Dr. Joel Ray of ICES, Toronto, Ontario.

“Experience and practice lower the likelihood of major complications.”

Low physician procedure volume is known to be associated with an increased risk of complications after complex surgery for cardiac, cancer and pelvic conditions, however little was known about its association with a common and technically simpler procedure like surgical abortion.

Details of the study

The study looked at Ontario data over 13 years, on 529, 141 induced surgical abortions performed before 20 weeks’ gestation, and compared low-volume and high-volume physicians.

Severe adverse events occurred in 194 out of 52 889 procedures (3.7 per 1000 procedures) in the low-volume group and in 656 out of 476 252 procedures (1.4 per 1000 procedures) in the higher-volume group.

Adverse events included injury to the mother, organ damage, admission to an intensive care unit and, very rarely, death within 42 days of the procedure.

“As serious adverse events are uncommon, any focus on centralizing procedures must consider geographical access to surgically induced abortion and wait times, so that women who need the procedure can have it within a reasonable time frame,” says Ning Liu.

In a related commentary, Drs. Wendy Norman and Laura Schummers, Department of Family Practice, University of British Columbia, Canada, write: “An induced abortion with the nearest provider may be the safest option for a woman with an abnormal or unintended pregnancy, and may entail lower complication rates than delaying an abortion or carrying a pregnancy to birth.”

They note that carrying a pregnancy to birth carries 8 times higher risk than that the accompanying article found for abortion care.

Drs. Norman and Schummers further note that “Canada needs policies, such as universal free contraception and universal access to medical abortion, that will ensure that all women are equitably supported in the prevention and management of unintended pregnancy.”

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