by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
December 5,
2008
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Washington,
DC (LifeNews.com) -- The results of a new study from a Johns Hopkins
University research team claiming that there is no link between abortions
and mental health problems for women should come as no surprise. The
authors of the study,
which the mainstream media touted Thursday, are bankrolled by Planned
Parenthood.
Tony Perkins, the head of the Family Research Council, told LifeNews.com
says the
JHU department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health, where
three of the four authors are employed, is funded by Planned Parenthood
of Maryland, the state's largest abortion business.
Meanwhile, he indicates study co-author Robert Blum heads up one of the most heavily funded population control programs in the world, which is worth roughly $1 billion.
Blum has also been intimately involved in the abortion business and has been on the board of directors of the Alan Guttmacher Institute, which is formerly the research arm of Planned Parenthood. He was the chairman of the pro-abortion group from 1999-2002.
Blum has also testified numerous times against laws allowing for parental notification before a teenage girl can have an abortion.
Perkins said these affiliations cast severe doubt on the accuracy of the JHU study.
"Not surprisingly, the Hopkins study is severely tainted by the team's pro-abortion bias," he said. "He and the other authors claim that any studies showing a link between abortion and depression are politically motivated, but considering the Department's ties to Planned Parenthood, theirs is living proof."
"As more evidence pours in contradicting Blum and company, this is just poor science," Perkins added.
Perkins also said he's not surprised at the timing of the study -- done just one month ahead of incoming president Barack Obama's administration.
"Now weeks away from the dawning of the Obama Administration, the parade of junk science has begun in hopes of substantiating the new President's anti-life agenda," he said.
Perkins also joined top researcher Priscilla Coleman in saying that the JHU review of studies left out several research papers confirming the link between abortion and adverse mental health issues.
"Blum's review of 21 surveys conveniently omitted the stacks of research published in peer-reviewed journals that showed an association between abortion and negative mental health effects," he said.
"The
research team at Johns Hopkins is attempting to persuade policymakers
that abortion does not cause emotional distress, despite strong evidence
to the contrary," he concluded.
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