Abstract

IntroductionThe impact on research findings that use pregnancy data from surveys with underreported abortions is not well-established. We estimate the percent of all pregnancies missing from women’s self-reported pregnancy histories because of abortion underreporting.MethodsWe obtained abortion and fetal loss data from the 2006–2015 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), annual counts of births from US vital statistics, and external abortion counts from the Guttmacher Institute. We estimated the completeness of abortion reporting in the NSFG as compared to the external counts, the proportion of pregnancies resolving in abortion, and the proportion of pregnancies missing in the NSFG due to missing abortions. Each measure was examined overall and by age, race/ethnicity, union status, and survey period.ResultsFewer than half of abortions (40%, 95% CI 36–44) that occurred in the five calendar years preceding respondents’ interviews were reported in the NSFG. In 2006–2015, 18% of pregnancies resolved in abortion, with significant variation across demographic groups. Nearly 11% of pregnancies (95% CI 10–11) were missing from the 2006–2015 NSFG due to abortion underreporting. The extent of missing pregnancies varied across demographic groups and was highest among Black women and unmarried women (18% each); differences reflect both the patterns of abortion underreporting and the share of pregnancies ending in abortion.DiscussionIncomplete reporting of pregnancy remains a fundamental shortcoming to the study of US fertility-related experiences. Efforts to improve abortion reporting are needed to strengthen the quality of pregnancy data to support maternal, child, and reproductive health research.

Highlights

  • The impact on research findings that use pregnancy data from surveys with underreported abortions is not well-established

  • What does this study add? This study examines the share of missing pregnancies due to abortion underreporting in the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) and demonstrates how incomplete abortion reporting can impact

  • We find that the share of missing pregnancies varies widely across demographic groups—a result of differential patterns in completeness of abortion reporting and the frequency of abortion relative to other pregnancy outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

The impact on research findings that use pregnancy data from surveys with underreported abortions is not well-established. Previous analysis of the 2006–2015 NSFG estimated that 60% of abortions in the prior five calendar years were not reported in the face-to-face (FTF) interview compared with counts collected from abortion providers directly, with substantial variation across population groups (Lindberg et al, 2020a). This estimate of underreported abortions is not an adequate indicator of the magnitude of missing pregnancies in these data; the proportion of all pregnancies that are missing depends on the extent of abortion underreporting, and on the share of pregnancies ending in abortion. Even for a population group with more complete abortion reporting, if the share of pregnancies ending in abortion for that group is large, the share of pregnancies missing from the data could be large

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