Spontaneous Abortion Risks in Man: Data from Reproductive Histories Collected in a Medical Genetics Unit
American journal of human genetics, 16(1), 1-25
Abstract
SPONTANEOUS ABORTION is one of the most common and least understood pathological processes. Because it is so difficult to obtain reliable information about abortion, even the basic facts about its frequency, familial distribution, and relation to parity and parental age are largely unknown or disputable. Such information is needed to provide a basis for advising women with several abortions about their chances of successfully completing another pregnancy, to evaluate measures for the prevention of abortion, as well as to provide clues to the etiology of the condition. Reproductive histories taken by personal interview with a random series of women would probably be the best available data for estimating spontaneous abortion statistics. These would include very early terminations of pregnancy, recognized as spontaneous abortions by the women concerned but not receiving medical attention, which are under-represented in series of consecutive hospital admissions or in consecutive cases from private obstetrical practice. They would allow estimation of abortion risks in women with given numbers of previous abortions and at given ages. Some reservations must be held about the validity of self-diagnosis of early abortion, but this source of error should not affect comparisons within the sample.
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Cite this article
Fraser, F. C., & Warburton, D. (1964). Spontaneous Abortion Risks in Man: Data from Reproductive Histories Collected in a Medical Genetics Unit. *American journal of human genetics*, *16*(1), 1-25.
Fraser FC, Warburton D. Spontaneous Abortion Risks in Man: Data from Reproductive Histories Collected in a Medical Genetics Unit. Am J Hum Genet. 1964;16(1):1-25.
Fraser, F. C., and D. Warburton. "Spontaneous Abortion Risks in Man: Data from Reproductive Histories Collected in a Medical Genetics Unit." *American journal of human genetics*, vol. 16, no. 1, 1964, pp. 1-25.
Keywords
Abortion, Induced, Spontaneous, Female, Genetics, Medical, Humans, Pregnancy, Reproductive History, Risk, Statistics As Topic, HUMAN, STATISTICS