Abortion Pill Studies Retracted: Politics or Science?
"Following the science" as the Supreme Court considers the safety and efficacy of medical abortions.

Our secular society has replaced the old arbiters of truth, priests and potentates, with science. One simple definition of the scientific method is that it is the self-correcting process of objectively establishing facts through testing and experimentation. Instead of appealing to the wisdom of divinely ordained scriptures or the pronouncements of princes, sophisticated moderns turn to the peer-reviewed scientific literature in search of reliable information on health, engineering, and, yes, public policy. Therefore, as we saw all too well during the late pandemic, politicians, public health practitioners, potion promoters, and pundits more or less all claim to "follow the science." (One notable recent exception is the ruling in a case involving in vitro fertilization by the chief judge of the Alabama Supreme Court.)
So is the recent retraction of three articles by the scientific journal Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology an example of the self-correcting processes of science or something less noble? After all, these articles were prominently cited as evidence in a federal court case that will now be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court later this month.
Sage Publications retracted two articles that suggested that the use of the abortion pill mifepristone significantly increased post-abortion emergency room use. Sage also retracted a third article from the same journal that reported that nearly half of Florida physicians the researchers identified as providing abortions had at least one malpractice claim, public complaint, disciplinary action, or criminal charge. (As background consider that a Florida law firm specializing in medical malpractice reports, "Physicians who provide care for women, particularly pregnant women, are the number one practice area for med mal lawsuits. Of OB-GYNs and related practitioners, 85 percent reported that they have been sued at some point during their career.")
In his April 7, 2023 decision, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas judge Matthew Kacsmaryk "followed the science" by citing the now retracted articles when he overturned the U.S Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) approval back in 2000 of the drug as safe and efficacious. Some of the studies have now been cited and their retraction decried in amicus briefs filed with the Supreme Court.
So why were the articles retracted? And why now? The Sage retraction notice states that "we made this decision with the journal's editor because of undeclared conflicts of interest and after expert reviewers found that the studies demonstrate a lack of scientific rigor that invalidates or renders unreliable the authors' conclusions."
With respect to conflicts of interest, the Sage note observes that all but one of the authors of the studies were affiliated with various "pro-life organizations that explicitly support judicial action to restrict access to mifepristone." This is entirely true. What is puzzling is that these affiliations are acknowledged in all of the articles as well as included in the fairly extensive professional biographies at the conclusions of each article. The authors did however declare for each article that there were "no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article."
On the other hand, the authors did disclose in two articles the "receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Charlotte Lozier Institute." According to the mission statement of the Lozier Institute, it "advises and leads the pro-life movement with groundbreaking scientific, statistical, and medical research. We leverage this research to educate policymakers, the media, and the public on the value of life from fertilization to natural death."
In its retraction note Sage argues that the authors should have explicitly declared a conflict of interest—not just mentioned the Lozier Institute's funding—had they properly followed the relevant guidelines issued by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). The ICMJE disclosure form does ask all authors "to disclose all relationships/activities/interests listed below that are related to the content of your manuscript. 'Related' means any relation with for-profit or not-for-profit third parties whose interests may be affected by the content of the manuscript."
Given that two of these articles challenged the safety of FDA-approved abortion pills, it's pretty clear that the interests of the anti-abortion Lozier Institute would be affected by their content. It's also pretty clear that the editor of the journal could not have been deceived about the institutional affiliations, financial support, and interests of the authors.
The Sage retraction note also reports that "all three articles were originally reviewed by a researcher who was also affiliated with the Charlotte Lozier Institute at the time of the review." It is worth noting that the Sage guidelines ask reviewers to "carefully consider whether you have any potential conflicts of interest [emphasis in original] relating to the paper before undertaking the review. As an example, you should not be reviewing the paper of anyone you have worked with, taught, and/or published work with in the past." Sage points to the Committee on Publication Ethics guidelines that advise reviewers to "declare all potential competing, or conflicting, interests" specifically noting that reviewers should not agree to review if they are employed by the same institution, or have been recent mentors, mentees, close collaborators or joint grant holders.
The authors' response over at the Lozier Institute counters that Sage uses "'double-anonymized' review, meaning neither the author nor the reviewer knows each other's identities." But just how credible is it that the Lozier Institute-affiliated peer reviewer would not have recognized the provenance of the three articles?
What about the "lack of scientific rigor" that post-publication peer review of the articles found? The Sage retraction reports that two independent subject matter experts "identified fundamental problems with the study design and methodology, unjustified or incorrect factual assumptions, material errors in the authors' analysis of the data, and misleading presentations of the data." The retraction does not detail the experts' findings and their reasoning.
Citing a private letter from the Sage journal to the authors, Science reports:
Sage specifies that they "artificially inflat[ed] the number of adverse events" by counting multiple visits by the same patient; that "conflating" ER visits with adverse events without examining diagnoses or treatments "may not be a valid or rigorous approach"; and that one paper's conclusion that the miscoding of incomplete abortions as miscarriages caused serious adverse events was "inaccurate and unsupported by the data."
Some insight as to the specific concerns of the experts engaged by Sage can be discerned from the articles authors' response to an earlier expression of concern last year. It is noteworthy that the expressions of concern appeared only after the research was cited by Judge Kacsmaryk as evidence for overturning the FDA's approval of the abortifacient.
Will the retractions affect the Supreme Court case? "The whole basis of claims of danger from mifepristone to women sits on these papers. There's nothing else in the literature," says New York University bioethicist Arthur Caplan in Science. "If these papers fall, then the argument that upper courts are reviewing falls apart."
Is Caplan correct that there is nothing else in the literature supporting the epidemiological claims about emergency room visits resulting from the use of mifepristone made by the Lozier Institute affiliated researchers? Basically, yes.
A quick check of Google Scholar finds that the retracted articles are thinly cited and mostly by other researchers who are associated with pro-life organizations. One exception citing their articles is a 2023 Canadian study evaluating the adverse events from using a combination of abortion medications. But even that study reported: "Although rare, short-term adverse events are more likely after mifepristone–misoprostol IA [induced abortion] than procedural IA [induced abortion], especially for less serious adverse outcomes."
When comparing women using abortion pills versus outpatient procedural abortions performed at nine weeks of pregnancy or before, the relative risks of serious adverse events was essentially the same (3.4 versus 3.3 per 1,000). In contrast, an earlier Canadian study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2022 evaluating the safety of mifepristone found that the incidence of abortion-related adverse events and complications remained stable as the proportion of abortions provided by medication increased rapidly.
Overall, most studies find that both medication and procedural abortions are safe for the women choosing to end their pregnancies. For example, a 2018 study in BMC Medicine estimating the major incident rate related to abortion care found: "The major incident rate for abortion (0.1%) is lower than the published rates for pregnancy (1.4%), as well as other common procedures such as colonoscopy (0.2%), wisdom tooth removal (1.0%), and tonsillectomy (1.4%). Abortion care is, thus, safer than many other unregulated outpatient procedures."
A 2015 study in Obstetrics & Gynecology reported: "The major complication rate was 0.23%: 0.31% for medication abortion, 0.16% for first-trimester aspiration abortion, and 0.41% for second-trimester or later procedures." And a 2024 study in Nature Medicine evaluating the safety and effectiveness of telehealth medication abortions found that "in total, 0.25% of patients experienced a serious abortion-related adverse event."
In its 2022 evidence-based evaluation of 99 medical abortion studies, the non-profit Cochrane Collaboration concluded, "Medical abortion is a safe and effective way to terminate pregnancy in the first three months." The Cochrane analysis added, "Mifepristone combined with misoprostol is more effective than using these medications on their own."
Toting up all of the cases reported to the FDA since 2000 finds that around 0.07 percent of the 5.9 million American women who have used medications to terminate their pregnancies have experienced any adverse events from taking them. Not surprisingly, researchers associated with various pro-life organizations including the Lozier Institute challenged the FDA figures in a 2021 article in, where else?, Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology.
So how could the Lozier Institute researchers come to conclusions contrary to the results found by so many other researchers with respect to the safety of medication abortions? The broken science of epidemiology is perhaps to blame. Epidemiologists anxious to make a significant finding can unconsciously or consciously torture nearly any set of observational data into confessing to whatever correlations that just happen to confirm the researchers' hypotheses.
Stanford statistician John Ioannidis surveys the dire state of epidemiology in his seminal 2005 PLoS Medicine article, "Why Most Published Research Findings Are False." "Any claim coming from an observational study is most likely to be wrong," asserted National Institute of Statistical Sciences researchers Stanley Young and Alan Karr in their 2011 article in the journal Significance. Young has estimated that only 5 to 10 percent of observational studies can be replicated. Of course, all of the researchers seeking to analyze the side effects of mifepristone are parsing observational data with respect to their prevalence and severity. The upshot is that the epidemiological literature is so cluttered with flawed studies that anyone can find some that confirm what they already believe and so assert that they are just "following the science."
The disclosure justifications cited by Sage for retracting the articles are largely spurious since the researchers behind the three retracted studies clearly did not hide their pro-life institutional affiliations. More problematically, the conflicted peer reviewer should have declined to evaluate the studies. And whatever their methodological failings, the three outlier articles from an obscure journal would most likely never have attracted extra scrutiny except for being cited as "follow the science" evidence to challenge the FDA's approval of a widely used abortifacient.
At the center of the case before the Supreme Court later this month is the proposition that any odd federal judge who claims to be "following the science" can overrule the decisions of the FDA that also claims to be "following the science." Will the Supreme Court now "follow the science" and ignore the retracted articles when it rules on that issue later this year?
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"Overall, most studies find that both medication and procedural abortions are safe for the women choosing to end their pregnancies."
They are, however, 100% fatal for the other patient.
It's like worrying that the dish might be too hot for the cannibal. Wouldn't want them to burn their mouth.
Womb-slaves must be kept in their place!
We already know where you stand on eating people.
Oh, God, what would Martin Luther King, Jr., who dreamed of having his children judged by the content of their characters do if he’d lived to see the contents of thousands of children’s skulls emptied into the bottomless caverns of the abortionists pits?
…How can the “Dream” survive if we murder the children? Every aborted baby is like a slave in the womb of his or her mother. The mother decides his or her fate…If the Dream of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is to live, our babies must live. Our mothers must choose life.
So do you agree with commenter "AT", riffing off of the Alabama judge (who has the Magical ability to Read The Mind of God, and translate it into LAW for humans), that Property rights to pond water are FAR more important than the so-called personal bodily “property rights” of womb-owning womb-slaves MUST BE HELD DOWN AND FORCIBLY IMPLANTED with known-and-tested genetically defective, frozen Sacred HUMAN Fartilized Egg Smells!!!
https://reason.com/2024/03/07/alabama-governor-signs-bill-protecting-ivf-treatments/
http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Jesus_Validated/#_Toc117957741
QUESTIONS THAT THE FANATICS WON’T EVER ANSWER: What do YOU think that the punishment should be for deliberately killing a fertilized human egg cell? Ditto the punishments for likewise killing a fertilized egg of an ape… A monkey… A rat… An insect… If your Righteous Punishments From on High are DIFFERENT in these cases, then WHY? WHERE do the differences come from? And what gives YOU (or the 51% of the voters) the right to punish the rest of us?
Never, ever, have I gotten any serious answers, when I pose these questions, about what the PUNISHMENTS should be! (Could it be that the fanatics don’t want us to focus on THEIR obsession, which is their smug and self-righteous “punishment boners”?). Also, the unwillingness to answer questions is strongly indicative of authoritarianism. At the root here is the unmistakable attitude of “Because I said so, peons! Do NOT question your Rulers!”
Well, fuck, how do you think they judge antipersonnel weapons? The lethality for the target is what is sought. Clearly a deadly weapon is still supposed to be safe to use.
"choosing to end"=== taking innocent life. But often men and baby-hating women who want you and the world to abort so their conscience will abate.
Hidden Epidemic: Nearly 70% of Abortions Are Coerced, Unwanted or Inconsistent With Women’s Preferences
David C. Reardon, Ph.D.
Katherine Rafferty, Ph.D., M.A.
.
And that's the sort of nonsense that causes so little trust in "research" on this topic. Almost all of it is so transparently biased as to be useless.
70% of abortions are unwanted. These are serious decisions with serious repercussions every way. Yeah, she might have wanted a child, but not now. Yes, she might not want an abortion, but they both just lost their jobs and cannot it. Yes, she might love the father and want a child but he beats her every night and she cannot be tied to him for the rest of her life.
No good story ends in an abortion clinic. This is a different question than whether it's the least-bad choice at times.
The question is at what point the clump of cells becomes another patient? Where is that point for you?
Will the Supreme Court now "follow the science" and ignore the retracted articles when it rules on that issue later this year?
I will bet that at least one opinion will cite the retracted article favourably and that opinion will be joined by at least one other justice.
I would love to see conditional decisions - "this decision is premised on a finding that X happened, and if it is later found that X did not happen, this decision is withdrawn." Hard to see how it would work in practice, but it's not obviously wrong.
"One notable recent exception is the ruling in a case involving in vitro fertilization by the chief judge of the Alabama Supreme Court."
And Judge Kacsmaryk's decision is another.
Worse in magnitude are all the ambulance chasers soaking money out of Bayer because of a safe product that isn't even under patent anymore, glyphosate. It has been proven not to cause cancer in humans.
"John Ioannidis"
Ioannidis himself joined the ranks of the junk scientists. He predicted four years ago that COVID would kill ten thousand Americans. He was off by a factor of 100, but he got quoted repeatedly by all the people who wanted mass death so that they wouldn't be inconvenienced. It is a shame on our academic medical establishment that so many of the disinformationists were at some of the most prestigious institutions.
Moar testing needed!
Yes, and ALWAYS more money and power for the researchers! Is water REALLY wet? We MIGHT conclusively know soon, for SURE this time, if the money keeps on flowing!
This is not an indictment of the scientific method or even of these particular studies. This is, however, a decent example of how deeply flawed the peer-review process has become. Peer review and the scientific method are no longer even casually correlated.
It's time to scrap peer review and go back to the open free-for-all of ideas that prevailed before the academia-elite captured the publication process.
Is peer review the problem, or is the problem a lack of transparency by study authors and publications?
They seem like different issues to me, but related.
It sounds like the authors were up front about their affiliation and funding. Bailey want the reviewer to have known that he had a second-hand connection to the authors, but with the double-blind process, it's hard to say for sure.
With the timing of the retraction and the court case, there may be some politics at play.
In climate ‘science’ , Peer Review is the problem
Note to foreign readers: In American English, "free" means uncoerced. It does not mean "at some other sucker's expense."
One simple definition of the scientific method is that it is the self-correcting process of objectively establishing facts through testing and experimentation.
Agreed. Now, please explain how the predictions of future climate change, and the effects of those changes on the planet and human civilization, have gone through such testing and experimentation.
Easy. Visit http://www.RealClimateScience.com The author--however brainwashed by God's Own Prohibitionists on the ethics of normative initiation of force--is a competent electrical engineer. His website produces reams of obviously fake, counterfeit, fudged, mendacious, misleading, cooked, forged, altered, masked, mislabeled and fraudulent propaganda produced by subsidized bureaucrats and illiterate teenagers unable to differentiate a constant. Tony's conclusions jibe with those of petitionproject.org in which volunteers like myself swarmed professions and academia to collect signatures from actual degreed scientists to stop ratification of the Kyoto Kamikaze--and won!
Climate change is no longer predictions, it is real.
The MAGA Cult can't accept reality about elections, how can you expect them to accept reality about climate change?
Anyone still denying climate change needs to be ignored. Totally. There is legitimate discussion as to what to do about it. But there is zero doubt that it has happened and is still happening.
Soooo close to admitting that The Science has become the new secular religion. Its saints are Mann and Fauci.
but you are the problme by posing it that way
as if no priests were scientists, for example
Potentates were never arbiters of truth. And the error originated and was perpetuated by the universities.
THe key headline for me was the several times when a university that was founded by the Popes rejected a Pope from speaking at the University !!
Put on a mask. Follow the science.
Six feet for safety. Follow the science.
3 weeks to flatten the curve. Follow the science.
Puberty blockers are harmless. Follow the science.
Gender transition prevents trans suicide. Follow the science.
There are 72 genders. Follow the science.
They’re not pedophiles or pedo-enablers. Follow the science.
The global is warming. Follow the science
The global is cooling. Follow the science.
Recycling matters. Follow the science.
The rainforests. No wait the ice caps. No wait Guam. Follow the science.
36,000 dead in Gaza. Follow the science.
They’re coming here to work and assimilate. Follow the science.
It’s just a harmless weather balloon. Follow the science.
TikTok isn’t spying on you. Follow the science.
Temu is free of slave labor. Follow the science.
And yet the “ScIeNcE” keeps getting EVERY ONE OF THEM wrong.
Maybe the god of your so-called “secular society” is a false one, hmm?
Property rights to pond water are FAR more important than the so-called personal bodily “property rights” of womb-owning womb-slaves who MUST BE HELD DOWN AND FORCIBLY IMPLANTED with known-and-tested genetically defective, frozen Sacred HUMAN Fartilized Egg Smells!!! AT Has Spoken, peons!!! Now OBEY!!! Or else!!! Or else there will be PAIN ASS YOU CAN SNOT IMAGINE!!!!
(AT Has Spoken, peons!!!)
Every Sperm Is Sacred!
https://youtu.be/fUspLVStPbk?feature=shared
THIS was AT's infinitely power-piggish response, folks, to ... (Yes, pond-water-owners VASTLY outrank womb-owners!!! AT Has Spoken!!!)
https://reason.com/2024/03/07/alabama-governor-signs-bill-protecting-ivf-treatments/
You arrogant nonsensical twit! I know arguing with you is like arguing with a brick wall, but who knows, more sensible people just MIGHT take a clue from the below:
Case A: Theoretical (COULDA-WOULDA-SHOULDA) harm to some fartilized HUMAN egg smells, caused by NOT implanting the tested-and-genetically defective said “Sacred” fartilized HUMAN egg smells, which are known to, at BEST case, if “successfully” brought to term, would suffer and die in hours or days at the most. There ARE these cases, you know! AND THE KICKER IS, THE FUCKING EGG SMELL IS FROZEN, OUTSIDE THE HUMAN BODY, AND SHOWS ZERO SIGNS OF LIFE, ABILITY TO FEEL PAIN, OR SENTIENCE!!!!
Case B: A thirsty human wants to drink pond water, ’cause he has no other water source. So, not liking diseases either, he BOILS the water first, KILLING innocent, motile, swimming, pain-feeling paramecia and water bears!!!
Now WHO has done more harm, and who, if anyone, should be PUNISHED?
AND WHO IS AN ARROGANT PUNISHMENT-LUSTING ASSHOLE MICRO-MANAGING, POWER-PIG AUTHORITARIAN?!?!?
who knows, more sensible people just MIGHT take a clue from the below
Perhaps. You should have quoted the reply. I did correctly address your scenario, after all.
AND WHO IS AN ARROGANT PUNISHMENT-LUSTING ASSHOLE MICRO-MANAGING, POWER-PIG AUTHORITARIAN?!?!?
China.
Property rights to pond water are FAR more important than the so-called personal bodily “property rights” of womb-owning womb-slaves...
THE SCIENCE HAS SPOKEN!
Still didn't quote the reply.
Why would I help to spread your stupid and your evil? Or your lust for power and punishment? There is WAAAAY more than plenty of that shit to go around already!
The mystical invisible friends have a pretty good record at war and genocide--and little else.
Who are you talking about?
The earth mother? The constantly wrong science authority? The State who pretends to care about you so long as it empowers them?
But there are at least 1000 genders.
Let's count them:
1) Female.
2) Male.
...........................................
Hmm, I guess there's only two.
Some languages have three genders, some don't have any at all.
If a language calls a tail a leg, how many legs does a dog have?
Tell me you don't know what science is without telling me you don't know what science is.
The ScIeNcE is whatever the eXpErTs say it is, of course!
The curve in NYC actually flattened exactly three weeks to the day after the lockdowns. I can give you example after example after example where the scientific consensus was right and the naysayers were wrong.
So, the year plus after that was just naked fascism for the heck of it?
The problem is what passes for science nowadays. Epidemiology is pure statistics where data can be easily fudged, so it should not be called “science”, as in direct observation of a process followed by reporting of data.
Pure statistics is a non-concept. Descriptive statistics is nothing without data. And all else is model-based.
You need to call an ambulance to take you To William Briggs, PhD Statistician to the Stars
The million Americans who died from COVID aren't fudged. Nor is the fact that people who are vaccinated rarely die from COVID. Nor is the fact that the earth has gotten warmer. Nor is the fact that children are getting measles thanks to the anti-vaxxers even though measles had been extirpated in the US decades ago. Nor is the fact that rates of death from cardiovascular disease and from motor vehicle accidents have plummeted in the past sixty years. Not is the fact that we actually do have treatments for some cancers that prolong life. I could go on and on.
It’s not an either or thing! The retractions are an example of the “scientific method” working properly AND an illustration of what’s wrong with the the institutional-based, publicly- and privately-funded, publish-or-perish incestuous peer reviewer relationship research mill as currently practiced. The proliferation of "scientific" journals hungry for publication material completes the picture perfectly. I can’t tell you how many presenters I have heard at scientific conferences start their presentation with the mandatory, “I have no conflicts to report.” It’s so automatic that it has been reduced to a shorthand, pro forma statement that means nothing. After every conference I have to rate each presentation and presenter on the question: “Was the presentation free of commercial bias?” to which the answer is always “yes” or we risk losing an hour of continuing medical education credit for relicensing by the state.
You are correct that this is an example of the scientific method where ideas are challenged and changed. The fact is the paper in question would likely have sat out in the public had they not been spotlighted by the lawsuit. Because the lawsuit heavily if not totally relies on the papers, they were likely to get a second look and that second look found a number of problems not originally found. This can be expected. I suspect that a person view on removing the papers will likely depend on their view on abortion. As we live in a world where advocacy groups judge shop, I have no problem believing they also shop for supporting evidence. Statues of Lady Justice often show her holding scales. What people need to realize and accept is when their evidence cannot balance out the weight of the evidence against them. A person may not like abortions, but they cannot argue that they are as safe as any other medical procedure.
When the sheer mass of published scientific reports is such that we can no longer trust the peer review process, and the peers reviewing each other's work on a one-hand-washes-the-other basis itself becomes suspect, it suggests that one can no longer simply take reports at face value. One must review every report of interest in detail looking for tell-tale signs of fraud. Rule 702 was a huge improvement in the legal process, but given the above factors and what you highlighted, we're still in the pre-scientific mode.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/fre/rule_702
And so it goes.
Typical Reason. when a study supports their views it is irrefutable. When it doesn't it is junk or an out right lie.
It's the golden rule. He who has the gold makes the rules.
He who is funding the study gets the results he wants.
I have personally led studies where the results were not what the funder expected. And I am still in academia.
"any odd federal judge who claims to be "following the science" can overrule the decisions of the FDA that also claims to be "following the science.""
The real agenda of MAGA is to install a dictatorship of the ideologue jurists. Never mind that they are idiots regarding science. The FDA has thousands of scientists, almost no judges in the US have any science background whatsoever. This particular judge wasn't just an ignoramus, though, he deliberately relied on junk science.