Fact check: Does one in every five pregnancies in England end in abortion?

Save the 8th makes claims about English abortion regime on posters

An anti-abortion poster in Dublin. Photograph: Reuters
An anti-abortion poster in Dublin. Photograph: Reuters

Question

Does one in every five pregnancies in the UK end in an abortion?

Who is making the claim?

The Save the 8th campaign, which opposes the repeal of the Eighth Amendment, makes the claim on one of the group's posters and in other campaign material. It states that, in England, 1 in 5 babies is aborted. The campaign uses the word "babies" as it considers that life begins at the moment of conception.

What are they basing their claims on?

Campaign spokesman John McGuirk says the statistic is something called “the abortion ratio”, which he says “is widely used internationally when discussing abortion”.

Although the poster references only England, the one-in-five figure is based on the 2015 figures for England and Wales and McGuirk says the group "verified it from the Journal's fact check". He is referring to an article from the Journal.ie news website.

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McGuirk explained that the figures do not take account of the number of pregnancies that end in miscarriages. Using miscarriages in the figures would be wrong as the “purpose of an abortion is to prevent a live birth”, he said.

He added: “The assumption that miscarriages would alter the stats is based on the idea that those who miscarry would have abortions at significantly lower rates than those who did not – and there is no evidence for that.”

The claim varies between Britain and England in literature and on posters.

The statistics

The number of abortions in comparison to the number of pregnancies is difficult to determine. While there are figures on the number of live births, the number of stillbirths and the number of abortions, there are no figures compiled on the number of miscarriages that occur in pregnancy. Adding up all of these would, including miscarriages, give you the number of pregnancies, allowing us to calculate an accurate ratio of the number of abortions. However, because the miscarriage figures are not available, such a calculation is not possible.

For England and Wales, figures from the Office of National Statistics say there were 692,271 live births and 3,112 stillbirths in 2016.

In that year, the UK Department of Health says 190,406 pregnancies were terminated. As a percentage of recorded pregnancies (live births + still births + abortions), one in five pregnancies, or 21 per cent, ends in an abortion.

Specifically for England, there were 663,157 live births and 2,895 still births. There were 177,350 terminations. That also equates to a rate of 21 per cent, or one in five.

In Scotland, the National Record of Scotland says there were 54,488 live births and 236 still births. In that year, 12,063 terminations were carried out. This allows us to calculate that 18 per cent of all pregnancies end in a termination, but remember this percentage is calculated without knowing how many pregnancies ended in a miscarriage.

In Northern Ireland, 24,076 live births and 13 terminations took place between April 2016 and March 2017. Figures for still births and miscarriages were not available.

The figures above combined suggest there were 976,865 pregnancies in the United Kingdom. A total of 202,482 of those resulted in the termination of the pregnancy, which equates to 20.73 per cent, which is one in five.

However, this figure cannot be relied upon as it does not include the number of pregnancies that end in miscarriage. The Office of National Statistics says it does not collate such figures but the NHS says one in six pregnancies in Britain ends in miscarriage.

There is also the added complication that the number of terminations carried out in the UK in 2016 were in relation to women who had travelled there for an abortion, including 3,265 from Ireland.

Therefore it is unclear if one in five pregnancies in England (or Britain) results in abortion.

Answer

It is unclear if one in five pregnancies, in either England or the UK as a whole, ends in an abortion.