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Health

Having an abortion vs continuing an unplanned pregnancy

Last reviewed 2026-04-25

Evidence quality 4.63/5

Eight-dimension review score against the quality rubric . Each dimension scored 1–5.

D1 Source verification
5/5
D2 Source authority & independence
4/5
D3 Regret-rate accuracy
4/5
D4 Source comparability
4/5
D5 Gilovich pattern
5/5
D6 Prose quality
5/5
D7 Caveat completeness
5/5
D8 Sample quality
5/5
Average 4.63/5
Direct evidence
Two paths diverging at a quiet crossroads, one curving left and one curving right, both leading into soft light.

Action regret

Having an abortion

5.0%

~5% at five years post-procedure

US women who received a wanted abortion at or near gestational limits

5 years post-procedure

Inaction regret

Continuing an unplanned pregnancy

4.0%

~4% at five years — expressed regret about continuing the pregnancy

US women denied abortion who carried to term (Turnaway Study)

5 years post-denial

% who regret this choice

balanced — Roughly balanced — both choices carry similar regret.

Related decisions

Semantically similar decisions — same territory, different trade-offs.

Health

Tubal ligation

% who regret this choice

Action dominates

Action regret 2.5× higher

Health

Vasectomy

% who regret this choice

Balanced

Roughly balanced

family

Having children

% who regret this choice

Balanced

Roughly balanced

family

Adoption placement vs raising

% who regret this choice

Action dominates

Action regret 4.8× higher

Health

Breast augmentation

% who regret this choice

Balanced

Roughly balanced

Health

Seeking therapy

% who regret this choice

Balanced

Roughly balanced

HealthDirect

Circumcision decision

% who regret this choice

Balanced

Roughly balanced

family

Birth delivery mode

% who regret this choice

Action dominates

Action regret 2.7× higher

The UCSF Turnaway Study — the largest longitudinal study of abortion decision outcomes — tracked women from 30 US facilities over five years. Among those who received an abortion, about 5% did not affirm it was the right decision at the five-year mark; relief was the predominant emotion at every time point. Among women denied an abortion who carried to term, about 4% expressed regret about continuing the pregnancy by the same five-year mark. The near-symmetry is the headline: both paths converge on high reported satisfaction.

This finding challenges narratives on both sides of the debate. The claim that abortion leads to lasting regret is not supported — roughly 5% of women did not affirm the decision, and even that figure includes ambivalence rather than outright regret. Equally, the claim that women forced to continue unwanted pregnancies will resent the outcome is not borne out at the five-year horizon — roughly 4% report not being glad they kept the child, and most adapted with declining distress over time. The emotional trajectory matters: initial distress among turnaways was substantial (sadness, anger, anxiety in the weeks after denial), but it declined steadily.

The caveat that dominates is selection. The turnaway group did not choose to continue — they were denied by gestational-limit policies. This quasi-natural experiment is the study’s methodological strength but means the “inaction” side represents forced continuation, not a deliberate preference. Attrition was also significant: 38% of the turnaway cohort was lost by year five, and those who stayed may have been those who adapted best. The emotional picture is more complex than a single satisfaction item suggests — significant minorities reported mixed feelings even while affirming the decision was right.

Sources: action

Claim ledger

Every number below is what each source reported, with the verbatim quote we relied on and how we arrived at our figure. Click any link to verify directly.

  1. [1] Social Science & Medicine / Rocca et al. — Decision rightness and relief predominate over the years following an abortion
    Decision rightness and relief predominate over the years following an abortion
    Statistic
    At 5 years, 95% of women who obtained an abortion reported it was the right decision; 99% at the final interview
    Excerpt
    “"Decision rightness remained high and steady over the five-year study period. By five years, 95% of participants reported that having the abortion was the right decision for them. Relief was the predominant emotion at all time points." ”
    Source data from
    2020-01-01
    Accessed
    2026-04-25
    Calculation
    The Turnaway Study followed women from 30 US facilities over 5 years. The 95% "right decision" figure at 5 years implies ~5% did not affirm it was right, which is the upper bound for regret. We use 0.05 as the regret_rate.
  2. [2] UC San Francisco — Five Years After Abortion, Nearly All Women Say It Was the Right Decision, Study Finds
    Five Years After Abortion, Nearly All Women Say It Was the Right Decision, Study Finds
    Statistic
    More than 95% of participants reported that abortion was the right decision over five years of follow-up
    Excerpt
    “"More than 95 percent of participants reported that having the abortion was the right decision for them over five years of follow-up. Feelings of relief and happiness increased over time, while negative emotions declined." ”
    Source data from
    2020-01-12
    Accessed
    2026-04-25
    Calculation
    Press summary of the Rocca et al. peer-reviewed paper. Corroborates the 95% figure and adds that positive emotions increased over time while negative emotions diminished.

Sources: inaction

Claim ledger

Every number below is what each source reported, with the verbatim quote we relied on and how we arrived at our figure. Click any link to verify directly.

  1. [1] ANSIRH / University of California, San Francisco — The Turnaway Study
    The Turnaway Study

    See all 2 Likelier entries citing this source →

    Statistic
    By 5 years, 96% of women who were denied an abortion and carried to term said they were glad they kept the baby
    Excerpt
    “"By five years after being denied an abortion, 96% of women turned away indicated they were glad they had kept their pregnancies." ”
    Source data from
    2022-06-15
    Accessed
    2026-04-25
    Calculation
    The Turnaway Study's "turnaways" who carried to term form the inaction group. 96% glad implies ~4% not glad, used as the regret_rate. Note the smaller sample (n≈161 who gave birth) and the selection effect: women denied abortion who then chose adoption are excluded from this figure.
  2. [2] Social Science & Medicine / Foster et al. — Emotions over five years after denial of abortion in the United States
    Emotions over five years after denial of abortion in the United States
    Statistic
    Women denied abortion who gave birth showed initial distress that declined over 5 years; by 5 years most reported positive feelings about the child
    Excerpt
    “"Among women denied abortions who gave birth, initial sadness and anger declined over time. By five years, the majority reported positive feelings about their child and situation." ”
    Source data from
    2020-12-01
    Accessed
    2026-04-25
    Calculation
    Longitudinal emotion tracking for the denial group. Confirms that initial distress fades and most women adapt positively, consistent with the 96% "glad" figure from the main Turnaway summary.

Caveats

The two populations are not interchangeable: women who obtained an abortion self-selected into that decision, while the "turnaways" were denied by gestational-limit policies — they did not freely choose to continue. This quasi-natural experiment is the study's strength but also limits generalizability. The Turnaway Study has been criticized for attrition (38% of the turnaway group was lost to follow-up by year 5) and for the potential that women who adapted well were more likely to remain in the study. Emotional complexity is not captured by a single "right decision" item: 33-41% of women who had abortions reported some regret alongside affirming it was right, and initial distress among turnaways was substantial. The near-symmetry of the 5-year outcome (95% vs 96% "right decision") is itself a finding — both paths lead to high reported satisfaction.

Raw data: /api/decisions.json