Data Show Claims of Increased Abortions Under Bush Don't Hold Up
October 20, 2004

More statistics

ABORTIONS BY YEAR

AGI:  Alan Guttmacher Institute Statistics (click here
for details and documentation)

 
CDC:  Center for Disease Control Statistics (click here for details and documentation)

   Year              
AGI
             CDC

   1973

       744,600


615, 831

1974

898,600

763,476

1975

1,034,200

854,853

1976

1,179,300

988,267

1977

1,316,700

1,079,430

1978

1,409,600

1,157,776

1979

1,497,700

1,251,921

1980

1,553,900

1,297,606

1981

1,577,300

1,300,760

1982

1,573,900

1,303,980

1983

1,575,000

1,268,987

1984

1,577,200

1,333,521

1985

1,588,600

1,328,570

1986

1,574,000

1,328,112

1987

1,559,100

1,353,671

1988

1,590,800

1,371,285

1989

1,566,900

1,396,658

1990

1,608,600

1,429,577

1991

1,556,500

1,388,937

1992

1,528,900

1,359,145

1993

1,495,000

1,330,414

1994

1,423,000

1,267,415

1995

1,359,690

1,210,883

1996

1,360,730

1,221,585

1997

1,335,000

1,186,039

1998

 1,319,000

 * 884,273

1999

 1,314,000

 *  861,789

2000

 1,312,990

** 857,475

  2001

§ 1,303,000 ** 853,485

  2002

§ 1,293,000 ** 854,122
  2003 §§1,293,000  
  2004 §§1,293,000  

§    AGI estimates
§§ NRLC Base Figure

*    excludes NH, CA, AK,  OK
**  excludes NH, CA, AK

 

 

 

Abortion in the United States:     Statistics and Trends

 The Consequences of Roe v. Wade
47,282,923
Total Abortions since 1973

Downward Trend Continues

After reaching a high of over 1.6 million in 1990, the number of abortions annually performed in the U.S. has dropped back to levels not seen since the late 1970s.

Two independent sources confirm this decline: the government’s Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Alan Guttmacher Institute (AGI), Planned Parenthood’s special research affiliate monitoring trends in the abortion industry.

The CDC ordinarily develops its annual report on the basis of data received from 52 central health agencies (50 states plus New York City and the District of Columbia). AGI gets its numbers from direct surveys of abortionists.

Because of these different methods of data collection, AGI has consistently obtained higher counts than the CDC. CDC researchers have admitted it probably undercounts the total number of abortions because reporting laws vary from state to state and some abortionists probably do not report or under-report the abortions they perform. Nevertheless, because increases and decreases in CDC and AGI numbers have until recently roughly tracked each other, both sources are thought to provide useful information on abortion trends and statistics. The CDC stopped reporting estimates for some states in 1998, making the discrepancy larger.

Abortions from AK, CA, NH, and OK were not counted in 1998-99 CDC totals, and numbers for AK, CA, and NH were still missing from 2000-2002 CDC figures. For those areas that did report, additional declines were seen between 1998 and 2001. The CDC reported a slight increase in 2002, in contrast with the AGI numbers showing a slight decrease.

The AGI figures for 2001 and 2002 are estimates based on abortion reports from over 40 states, and show a downward trend. AGI estimates that abortions decreased in 2002, to the lowest number since 1976.

Using AGI figures through 2002, estimating 1,293,000 abortions for 2003-05, and factoring in the possible 3% undercount AGI estimates for its own figures, the total number of abortions performed in the U.S. since 1973 equals 47,282,923.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*Based on numbers reported by the Alan Guttmacher Institute 1973-2002, with estimates of 1,293,000 for 2003-2005.  AGI estimates a possible 3% under reporting rate, which is factored into the total.