Abortion exists for many years and has been studied in various societies. From the early days it was legal in the United States. In the mid-nineteenth century the province began to pass the law to make abortion illegal. There are two different types of abortion. One is clinical abortion and the other is abortion. Abortion is very common. In fact, in the United States, one out of every three women has been aborted at the age of 45. The motive for anti-abortion law varies from state to state.
From the mid-nineteenth to the latter half, the province began making laws to make abortion illegal. The motive for anti-abortion law varies from state to state. One reason for this is that people are worried that the population is occupied by new immigrant children. The birth rate of that child is higher than the birth rate of "native" Anglo-Saxon women. In the 19th century, all surgical procedures including abortion were very dangerous. Hospitals are rare, preservatives are not known, and even the most respected doctors have their own medical education. Without existing technology today, the maternal mortality rate at birth is very high. The risk of abortion is similar to the risk of other forbidden operations
In 1803 Britain abortion regulation became illegal and in the 1920s the United States began to have various abortion prevention laws codified or expanded common law. In 1821, the law of Connecticut targeted a pharmacist who sold "poison" to a woman to induce abortion, and in 1829 New York accelerated abortion as contempt with abortion as a felony. Some people believe that the early American abortion law is promoted not by moral issues with abortion but by procedural safety concerns. However, regardless of whether pregnant women are harmed or not, this theory contradicts the fact that abortion is punished, and many of the early laws punish physicians and indigenous people, Without