Evaluating
Adoption Statistics
Bachrach's
Study:
How Pro-Adoption Organizations Twist the Facts
by Bernadette Wright, Ph.D.
To
convince mothers to abandon their babies, adoption agencies
and anti-abortion organizations often ignore the trauma experienced
by mothers who lose their children and purport that they will
be better
off. Several pro-adoption organizations have relied
on a 1986 study by Dr. Christine Bachrach of the National
Center for Health Statistics* to support this claim. This
article compares what pro-adoption organizations said about
the Bachrach study with what the study actually says.
How
Infant Adoption Promoters Interpret the Study
Life
Issues Institute, an anti-abortion organization that favors
adoption, in an article repeated on CrisisPregnancy.com,
said:
"...Let's
recall a fine study out of the U.S. National Center for Health
Statistics by Dr. Christine Bachrach. The area that she reported
on is how does the b****mother fare--the generous woman who
placed her baby in the arms of adoptive parents--as compared
to a single mother who keeps her baby?
"Well,
Dr. Bachrach has good news for us. From her report, which
is well documented, it is clear that the women who choose
adoption do much better than those unmarried women who keep
their babies. Let's look. Only 18% of women who choose adoption
later live below the poverty line. In comparison, 40% of
women who kept their babies live in poverty.
"Another
way of looking at this is to ask how many were receiving
some kind of public assistance. Here the difference is even
greater. For those who opted for adoption, only 21% were
on public assistance compared to 51% of those who kept their
babies.
"How
about Aid for Dependent Children (AFDC) - that's the big
government program? What are the numbers here? They're almost
startling! Of the single b**** mothers who were parenting
their children, 36% were receiving AFDC compared to only
7% of the women who had placed their babies.
"Enough
of finances. Let's look at some other parameters. Another
measure of future stability and security is education. Who
finished high school? 77% of those who placed their babies
finished, while only 60% of the b**** mothers who kept their
babies finished high school.
"What
about the stability that marriage brings later - or certainly
should? Does placing a child in an adoptive home help or
hinder the b**** mother's chance for a later marriage? It
helps, quite a bit. Of those who kept their children, only
50% married later. Of those who placed their children, 70%
married later....
"Her
data showed that both groups--those who chose adoption and
those who did not--had an identical fertility rate of 59%
later. "
The
NAIC
said:
"A
1982 study found that unmarried b****mothers who made adoption
plans were more likely to continue their education, were
more likely to marry subsequently, and were less likely
to receive public assistance than b****mothers who chose to
parent their child born out-of-wedlock. (Bachrach). (emphasis
added)"
Why
These Interpretations Are Wrong
These
interpretations of the Bachrach study are wrong for several
reasons. First, in comparing unmarried mothers who kept the
child of their first pregnancy with mothers who lost their
first child, Bachrach reported both adjusted and unadjusted
percentages (see table below). Both Life Issues Institute
and NAIC used Bachrach's "unadjusted percentages" from
the study, to exaggerate the differences in outcomes between
mothers who surrendered their first child and unmarried mothers
who kept the child of their first pregnancy. A more valid
measure of the consequences of adoption is the "adjusted percentages."
To understand the effects of adoption, it is important to
control for factors other than adoption that may explain the
differences between mothers who surrendered and those who
kept their babies. The adjusted percentages in the study control
for the effects of (1) time since pregnancy ended, (2) age
at pregnancy, (3) father's education, (4) whether living with
both parents at age 14, and (5) race.
| Characteristic
at Time of Interview |
Baby
Kept by
Unmarried Mother |
Adoption |
| Unadjusted
Percentage |
| Below
poverty |
40% |
18% |
| Receiving
any public assistance |
51% |
21% |
| Receiving
AFDC |
36% |
7% |
| Completed
high school |
60% |
77% |
| Ever
married |
51% |
73% |
| Had
another baby |
59% |
59% |
| Adjusted
Percentage |
| Below
poverty |
35% |
23% |
| Receiving
any public assistance |
45% |
26% |
| Receiving
AFDC |
33% |
10% |
| Completed
high school |
61% |
80% |
| Ever
married |
54% |
56% |
| Had
another baby |
61% |
51% |
The adjusted
percentages suggest much smaller differences between mothers
who surrendered and those who kept their children than Life
Institute or NAIC would have us believe. For example, both
organizations claimed that mothers who surrendered were more
likely to get married. However, as Bachrach pointed out, no
significant difference was found when the study adjusted for
other factors that may have affected likelihood of getting
married:
"Although
the percentage who ever married and the percentage who had
a subsequent birth differ considerably among the four pregnancy
outcomes** before adjustment, after adjustment the differences
are smaller and nonsignificant. The adjusted percentage
ever married was virtually identical for all three groups
who had not married by the time the pregnancy ended."
(emphasis added)
Second,
Life Institute noted that unmarried mothers who kept their
children were more likely than mothers who lost their children
to adoption to be receiving AFDC and said the differences
were "startling." However, there is nothing "startling" about
it. Using adjusted percentages, only 51 percent of mothers
who surrendered had another baby. Because one must have a
dependent child in order to qualify for AFDC, about half (49
percent) of the mothers who surrendered would not have been
able to receive AFDC no matter how dire their financial condition.
Thus, the lower rate of AFDC assistance among mothers who
surrendered, half of whom never parented a child, should not
be interpreted as evidence that they were better off financially.
Also, it is important to be aware that the percentages "receiving
any public assistance" include mothers receiving AFDC.
Third,
Life Institute concluded that Bachrach's study was "good news"
for people who spend their time attempting to separate mothers
and their babies. Yet Bachrach's study in no way provides
evidence that adoption causes any benefits for the mother.
It is important to remember that correlation does not equal
causation. As Bachrach said, just because women who surrender
their children were less likely to be in poverty and more
likely to complete high school does not mean that surrending
the child caused these differences. It is possible
that both the decision to surrender and the later financial
well-being of the mother were a result of other, unmeasured
factors. To say that Bachrach's study provides evidence that
adoption is somehow good for the mother is to draw conclusions
that have no basis in the available evidence, conclusions
that Bachrach herself cautioned the reader not to make:
" The associations between socioeconomic factors, such
as a low percentage in poverty, and being either an adopted
child or a mother who made an adoption plan require careful
interpretation. Although there are ample grounds for expecting
that adoption reduces the chances of poverty for the unmarried
pregnant woman and her child, this study also suggests that
socioeconomic factors, as reflected in race and father's education,
may play an important role in the adoption decision. This
could create an association between adoption and socioeconomic
status even if there were no direct causal link. For example,
to the extent that a woman's decision whether to place her
child for adoption depends on her prospects for educational
or occupational achievement (with which childrearing could
conflict), her later economic status may reflect a continuation
of the same economic conditions that influenced her decision
rather than the effect of the decision per se." (emphasis
added)
Fourth,
even if mothers who surrendered were found to have higher
incomes or more education because they surrendered, this would
not mean that they "do much better" overall. Having more money
or more education does not make up for the trauma and lifetime
of emotional pain that losing one's child brings. It should
be noted that the study was done in 1982, before any real
awareness of negative consequences to mothers had made its
way into the public consciousness. People didn't even consider
the possibility!
In conclusion,
this is a good example of how anti-abortion groups and adoption
agencies will twist the facts and lie to get mothers to surrender
their babies!
*Bachrach,
Christine A. "Adoption Plans, Adopted Children, and Adoptive
Mothers." Journal of Marriage and the Family, 48 (May
1986): 234-253.
**The study also included outcomes for mothers who were married
and kept their babies and women who lost their pregnancy due
to miscarriage, stillbirth, or abortion.
Copyright
© Bernadette Wright 2003.

Note: There is a large market for newborn babies for adoption.
Adoption "counselors" in North America like to refer
to expectant parents as "birthparents" or "birthmothers",
while calling the unrelated person hoping to adopt a "parent".
The objective of this so-called "respectful adoption
language" is to make the acquisition of healthy newborn
babies by infertile people seem "normal". The euphemism
"adoption" is used to deflect attention from the
reality - this is a transfer of human babies from loving (if
naive or pressured) relatives to customers.
The misleading, disrespectful terms "birthmother",
"birthfather" and "birthparents" are used
on this website for search engine purposes only. The terms
"mother", "father", "single parent",
" family member" and "natural mother"
are accurate, respectful, and nonderogatory terms. See " by Diane Turski for more
information.
Other misleading, dishonest terms include "biological"
child, "genetic" sister, "surrogate" mother,
egg "donor", or sperm "donor". These terms
are used to make human beings appear to be unrelated to their
own family members. Why would a "donated" child
(or adult adoptee) wish to learn more about - or contact -
her "biological" sister or mother? Why would she
say after reunion that it "feels like" her "biological
sister" (or other relative) is her sister (or other relative)?
Because true families are created by nature, not by government
edicts or by the adoption or "sale" of babies.
People who are infertile or gay claim to have a "right
to adopt" or a "right" to create a baby for
their use. We support the right of a human being not to be
removed from naive family members and sold to customers.

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Is your unmarried daughter pregnant?
Consider options to help to keep your grandchild:
"Unplanned"
Pregnancy Help
Lost a baby to adoption? Learn
about the social policies designed to get more babies for
adoption and get to know some other moms like yourself:
OriginsUSA: American
Adoption and "Unwed" Mothers History
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We chose a geneological theme for this website
because in infant adoption geneological connections
to family are broken
and family trees demolished.
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