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Motherhood, Abortion, and the Medicalization of Poverty

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Abstract

This article considers the impact of laws and policies that determine who experiences unplanned pregnancy, who has abortions, and how economic status shapes one's response to unplanned pregnancy. There is a well-documented correlation between abortion and poverty: poor women have more abortions than do their richer sisters. Equally well-documented is the correlation between unplanned pregnancy and poverty. Finally, the high cost of motherhood for poor women and their offspring manifests in disproportionately high lifelong rates of poverty, ill-health and mortality for offspring and mothers, alike. Read together, these factors offer a vivid illustration of the medicalization of poverty.

Type
Symposium 1 Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2018

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