Artículo de revista

Coelho, Helena L.; Teixeira, Ana Cláudia; Santos, A. P.; Forte, E. B.; Morais, S. M.; La Vecchia, Carlo; Tognoni, Gianni; Herxheimer, A.

Misoprostol and illegal abortion in Fortaleza, Brazil
Coelho, Helena L.; Teixeira, Ana Cláudia; Santos, A. P.; Forte, E. B.; Morais, S. M.; La Vecchia, Carlo; Tognoni, Gianni; Herxheimer, A. - 1993 - Lancet, 341, 8855, 1261-3

Palabras claves : aborto ilegal; agentes abortivos; anticoncepción de emergencia; biología; complicaciones; complicaciones del aborto; determinantes; educación en planificación familiar; fisiología; medicamentos abortivos; métodos; métodos abortivos; planificación familiar; prostaglandinas
País : America del Sur; America Del Sur; América latina; Brasil; Latina America; País en desarrollo; Sudamérica

Resumen : Misoprostol, a prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) analogue indicated for ulcer treatment, has been widely used as an abortifacient by women in Brazil, where abortion is legal only in cases of rape or incest, or to save the woman's life. Because misoprostol is an inefficient abortifacient, many women who use it have incomplete abortions and need uterine evacuation. The authors reviewed the records of women admitted to the main obstetric hospital of Fortaleza, capital of Ceara state, Brazil, between January 1990 and July 1992, for uterine evacuation after induced abortion. The number of incomplete abortions induced by misoprostol increased substantially during the first half of 1990, and declined thereafter. Of the 593 cases in 1991, 75% were related to misoprostol, 10% to the use of other specific drugs, and 6% to unspecified drugs. For the remaining 9%, the procedure used was not recorded: these included 3% in whom abortion had been induced by a clandestine abortionist. The number of uterine evacuations/month fell from 89 in August 1990 to 62 in July 1991, when sales of misoprostol in Ceara state were suspended. The fall continued after the sale of misoprostol ceases, to about 20 cases in December 1991: numbers remained around this level until June 1992, sustained by clandestine sales. The lack of access to contraception is the main reason for the large numbers of unplanned pregnancies and is a major public health issue for Brazilian women. The prohibition of abortion creates a void in which misuse of medicines in one extra complication, mainly because of the poor control of drug marketing. (author's)

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