THE last thing that Valada Penny wanted was a baby. At 22, the beautiful
black woman already had one child by a teen-age marriage. While
separated from her husband and living with her parents in Brooklyn,
working and trying to plan her future, she again became pregnant. She
considered having the child. Then, when she was more than four months
along, she decided instead to have an abortion. The late procedure, which involved induced labor, was painful. “I was
like to the point of screaming, and I muffled my screams and I was
holding on to the table,” she recalled. “It was worse than having a
baby.” It was also emotionally unsettling. One nurse in Kings County
Hospital made a point of telling her “what a pretty little boy” had
just been aborted, though Valada had asked not to be told the fetus'
sex. Mothers in the maternity ward, where she was sent to recover,
treated her like a pariah. 'They would just look at me.” said Valada.
“and the looks could tell me what they were thinking.” Despite her distress, Valada Penny was far more fortunate than many an
American woman faced with an unwanted pregnancy. While she was
pondering her decision a year ago last summer, the New York State law
that allows abortion on demand at any time through the 24th week of
pregnancy took effect. Her operation was thus performed legally, safely
andbecause she was eligible for Medicaidfree. Valada Penny's experience underscores both the changes and the unsolved
dilemmas in the practice of abortion. Though the precise figure is
impossible to establish, it is estimated that up to 1,000,000 American
women per year were undergoing illegal abortions before 1970. Some died
from them, and others suffered serious injury. Now abortion is becoming
increasingly acceptable in the U.S., though many doctors and a majority
of the public disapprove of the trend. An actual count has not been
completed, but the figures will probably show that in the past 15
months, 400,000 American women obtained legal abortions at hospitals
and clinics. Even more are expected to take advantage of newly
liberalized laws in the next year. This development is one of the most
dramatic in American medicine and mores; yet inequities and problems
remain for all concerned. WHO AND WHY. The majority of those who have undergone legal operations
across the country are between 20 and 30, white and single. Still,
about half of the New York cases have involved married women. Hawaii
authorities are now reporting requests from a growing number of older
married mothers. The figures indicate that educated, middle-class women
are better able, or more inclined to take advantage of the liberalized
laws. But blacks, whose birth rate is 50% higher than that of whites,
have recently begun to follow suit in large numbers, particularly where
abortion is made easy for the poor. In New York City, blacks now
undergo one abortion for every three live births, whites one for every
five, Puerto Ricans one for seven.