Abortion Information
Post Abortion
Syndrome From A Doctors Viewpoint
By Dr. Stephen Edmondson
Dr.
Stephen Edmondson has been in private psychiatric practice in
Atlanta for 19 years. He attended Medical College of Georgia
at Augusta and served his internship at Piedmont
Hospital. His first year of residency was at University
Hospital in Baltimore and his last two years was at
Emory University Hospital. He then served for two years as a
U.S. Navy Medical Officer. In his years of private practice,
he has treated many women who have post-abortion problems.
Q: What is Post-Abortion
Syndrome (PAS)?
Doctor: Post-Abortion Syndrome is a category of Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder, either acute or delayed. With the acute form,
symptoms appear within six months of trauma and are usually
resolved within six months. With the delayed form, symptoms last
longer and the onset is much later. Most of the PAS category that
I have seen occurred long after the abortion was done, many
months to several years later.
This disorder follows a specific
"stressor" event which is outside the normal experience
and often has elements of a threat to life at some level. Most of
these cases involve one specific incident. The disorder seems to
be more severe and lasts longer when the stressor is of human
design, which is certainly the case in an abortion picture.
Q: Is PAS recognized within the
medical community?
Doctor: It is being widely discussed and is being accepted now.
If a physician sees someone in the aftermath of an abortion and
diagnoses Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, with abortion as the
stressor, it would not be questioned. Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder only became a listing (in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders) in 1981 or 1982 in response to
the combat-related disorders (of Vietnam veterans).
Q: Why does PAS tend to
manifest itself so long after the abortion takes place?
Doctor: With an abortion, which might have carried with it a good
deal of uncertainty and pressure, the individual is swept along
without sorting out and thinking through issues involved. In all
major crisis situations, there is a kind of helplessness, and
people are very suggestive. Pressure can persuade the individual
to go ahead and get the abortion done. After it is over, the
interest is in going ahead with the person's life and forgetting
about it. Denial comes into play. The person doesn't want to
think or talk about it, she wants to keep it secret. There is a
sealing over of the whole experience. Denial, the death of a
child or a close relative, repression, or erasing from conscious
awareness can lead the individual to not think of the abortion
for some time afterwards. But to do this requires a good bit of
mental energy.
Q: What are some common
symptoms signaling PAS?
Doctor: Denial is one of the aspects of PAS. When memories do
begin to come back, there may be dreams of the baby or
recollections of the abortion clinic. Often guilt and grief might
begin to appear. Depression is one of the first signs, along with
anxiety and irritability. The woman may experience emotional
numbing: a feeling of going through the motions without being
emotionally connected. There may be withdrawal in a marriage (or
boyfriend) relationship, acting out in the form of sexual
activity, or sexual responsiveness may be blunted. Sometimes we
see repeated pregnancies, as if the individual is trying to
replace the aborted baby. There may be difficulty concentrating,
inefficiency in work, and a blunting of memory.
Q: Is there a relation between
PAS and child abuse?
Doctor: Depression, irritability and difficulty coping would make
it hard to deal with children. With all cases of Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder, frustration tolerance is down, and the
individual is likely to explode in anger at limited provocation
and might well hurt someone.
I read a journal article in which
the writer made the point that people have a strong natural drive
to recreate themselves by having children, but in our time there
has been a progressive devaluing of children. Once we begin to
abort them, their value declines even further. This undercuts the
desire to recreate ourselves. This devaluation of children can be
tied to our national decrease in childbearing, increase in
unwanted pregnancies and subsequent abortions, as well as the
marked increase in child abuse.
Q: Is there usually an event or
situation that triggers PAS?
Doctor: There are some particular things that tend to bring back
an awareness of the abortion, such as the woman's admission to a
hospital or going into an operating room, her child being taken
in for surgery, the birth of her child or seeing a friend's
newborn or the death of a child, close relative or friend.
Q: Is every woman who has had
an abortion likely to develop PAS?
Doctor: Some women may work through the aftermath of abortion
with the aid of a support group, their church or family and
friends. But I believe the only person who would not be affected
by an abortion would be someone with severe character disorder.
Such an individual can form no real attachment to other human
beings and therefore has no feeling for how her actions affect
others.
The better a woman's capacity to
repress, the longer the disorder will be put off, but the greater
the eventual stress. Some women can talk quite glibly about the
issue. They build support groups and are not consciously bothered
by their abortions, but they spend a great deal of time and
energy justifying them.
Q: How is PAS treated and
resolved?
Doctor: I review symptoms carefully with no prejudgments.
I take the person back through a life review and interview close
relatives. I see the patient frequently, but it is important not
to overwhelm them by bringing too much to the surface at once. In
the process of resolving feelings about the abortion, the
individual must understand how and why it happened. The patient
must look at how she handles her life.
Q: Is grieving for the aborted
child an important aspect of therapy?
Doctor: Yes, but one aspect of denial is the idea that the
aborted baby was not a person. For a person in crisis, it is easy
to buy into the idea that the fetus is just a piece of tissue.
But this tissue in the woman's uterus is not in any sense her
tissue. The fetus is a unique individual: there has never been
one like it, there will never be another. In order to resolve
grief, the woman must admit that a child was aborted.
Q: How would you advise a woman
suffering from PAS?
Doctor: She should turn to those who are pro-life, support groups
and counselors who take a clear stand on abortion and can help
restore the woman's sense of the meaning of life. Abortion
delivers a body blow to the meaning of life.
This article originally appeared
in the American Association of Pro-Life Pediatricians
Newsletter, Autumn 1990. Reprinted by permission in the Association
for Interdisciplinary Research in Values and Social Change
Newsletter, Vol. 3, No. 4 - Winter 1991
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