Darney Blair G, Saavedra-Avendano Biani, Lozano Rafael
Center for Health Systems Research, National Institute of Public Health, Av. Universidad 655, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, Portland, OR, USA.
Center for Health Systems Research, National Institute of Public Health, Av. Universidad 655, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.
Contraception. 2017 Jan;95(1):105-111. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2016.08.004. Epub 2016 Aug 18.
A recent publication [Koch E, Chireau M, Pliego F, Stanford J, Haddad S, Calhoun B, Aracena P, Bravo M, Gatica S, Thorp J. Abortion legislation, maternal healthcare, fertility, female literacy, sanitation, violence against women and maternal deaths: a natural experiment in 32 Mexican states. BMJ Open 2015;5(2):e006013] claimed that Mexican states with more restrictive abortion laws had lower levels of maternal mortality. Our objectives are to replicate the analysis, reanalyze the data and offer a critique of the key flaws of the Koch study.
We used corrected maternal mortality data (2006-2013), live births, and state-level indicators of poverty. We replicate the published analysis. We then reclassified state-level exposure to abortion on demand based on actual availability of abortion (Mexico City versus the other 31 states) and test the association of abortion access and the maternal mortality ratio (MMR) using descriptives over time, pooled chi-square tests and regression models. We included 256 state-year observations.
We did not find significant differences in MMR between Mexico City (MMR=49.1) and the 31 states (MMR=44.6; p=.44). Using Koch's classification of states, we replicated published differences of higher MMR where abortion is more available. We found a significant, negative association between MMR and availability of abortion in the same multivariable models as Koch, but using our state classification (beta=-22.49, 95% CI=-38.9; -5.99). State-level poverty remains highly correlated with MMR.
Koch makes errors in methodology and interpretation, making false causal claims about abortion law and MMR. MMR is falling most rapidly in Mexico City, but our main study limitation is an inability to draw causal inference about abortion law or access and maternal mortality. We need rigorous evidence about the health impacts of increasing access to safe abortion worldwide.
Transparency and integrity in research is crucial, as well as perhaps even more in politically contested topics such as abortion. Rigorous evidence about the health impacts of increasing access to safe abortion worldwide is needed.
最近的一篇出版物[科赫E,奇劳M,普利戈F,斯坦福J,哈达德S,卡尔霍恩B,阿拉塞纳P,布拉沃M,加蒂卡S,索普J。堕胎立法、孕产妇医疗保健、生育率、女性识字率、卫生设施、暴力侵害妇女行为和孕产妇死亡:墨西哥32个州的一项自然实验。《英国医学杂志·开放》2015年;5(2):e006013]称,堕胎法律限制更严格的墨西哥州孕产妇死亡率较低。我们的目标是重复该分析、重新分析数据并对科赫研究的关键缺陷进行批判。
我们使用了校正后的孕产妇死亡率数据(2006 - 2013年)、活产数以及州一级的贫困指标。我们重复已发表的分析。然后,我们根据堕胎的实际可获得性(墨西哥城与其他31个州)对州一级按需堕胎的暴露情况进行重新分类,并使用随时间的描述性统计、合并卡方检验和回归模型来检验堕胎可及性与孕产妇死亡率(MMR)之间的关联。我们纳入了256个州年观察值。
我们未发现墨西哥城(MMR = 49.1)与31个州(MMR = 44.6;p = 0.44)之间的MMR存在显著差异。使用科赫对各州的分类,我们重复了已发表的在堕胎可及性更高的地区MMR更高的差异。在与科赫相同的多变量模型中,但使用我们的州分类,我们发现MMR与堕胎可及性之间存在显著的负相关(β = -22.49,95%置信区间 = -
38.9;-5.99)。州一级的贫困与MMR仍然高度相关。
科赫在方法和解释上存在错误,并对堕胎法律和MMR做出了错误的因果论断。墨西哥城的MMR下降最为迅速,但我们研究的主要局限性在于无法就堕胎法律或可及性与孕产妇死亡率得出因果推断。我们需要关于全球范围内增加安全堕胎可及性对健康影响的严格证据。
研究中的透明度和诚信至关重要,在堕胎等政治上有争议的话题中可能更是如此。需要关于全球范围内增加安全堕胎可及性对健康影响的严格证据。