It definitely take effort to find what you're looking for. You have to really WANT it.
I'll take one last crack at it.
The category of "Health" for example includes the mother's health, and that of others. It also includes mental health, drug and alcohol use, etc.
More importantly, few if any of the women studied gave just one reason. Often there are many reasons. I'm still in school, can't afford it, boyfriend broke up, I like to drink and use drugs a lot, and the baby's health would suffer, etc.
The example above would be included under "health" and 3 other categories, none of which are actually health risks to the mother. There's also no reason to suspect that HER health is the primary reason. Certainly as she didn't even mention it in the above hypothetical example.
So does that count as "Protecting the health of the mother" as pro-abortionists would argue? Is it as high as 12%? Lets dive deeper.
Here's a study of 1,209 women at clinics from 2004.
https://www.guttmacher.org/journals/...e-perspectives
If we look in
Par 3 under "Data Analysis", we see
"Of the 1,209 respondents, 4% gave no reasons and were excluded from most analyses. "
OK, so 1,205 women gave one or more reasons for having an abortion.
Are you with me so far?
Then at the bottom of
Par 4, under Reasons for Abortion we find
"Nine women cited health concerns for themselves, possible problems affecting the health of the fetus or both as a reason for terminating the pregnancy."
So, 9 of 1,205 gives us what? 3/4 of one percent? That means 99.25% did it for reasons
other than their own,
or their fetus's health.
And really, the fetus's health is probably most of that. The maternal death rate in the USA runs around 0.0004 most years. [32 / 100,000]
So really, I probably should have said that 99.5% of them aren't healthcare. But as I can't find a percentage breakdown in that final category, I can't tell if it's 99.5% or 99.8% that aren't healthcare, and I'm out of time, so I'll just stick with the 99% number [>99.25% technically].