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149 lines
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Plaintext
149 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
"Each day of the week this medical drama, or one very similar is
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enacted in communities. Perhaps it is taking place at this very minute
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in your town or city.
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Mr. and Mrs. R. live in a northern Ontario city, have three
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children and sought permanent protection against unwanted
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pregnancy. Mr. R. had a vasectomy, and although he was found to
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be infertile on a subsequent sperm count, Mrs. R. became
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pregnant a few months later. A repeat sperm count was positive
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and a physical examination showed that the vans deferens, had
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been severed on one side only. The other side had been
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temporarily occluded due to swelling at the operative site,thus
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leading to the previously false negative sperm count.
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Mrs. R. sough an abortion of this pregnancy that she and her
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husband had tried so hard to prevent. He physician informed her
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that this was not possible in their city since the theraputic
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abortion committee passed very few applications, and then only
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in instances where the woman already had six or more children,
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or where a psychiatrist had concluded that she was likely to
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become insane if she could not have an abortion.
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Mrs. R. was forced to make two trips to Toronto, hundreds of
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miles away, at her own expense, to procure an abortion. The
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first trip was necessary in order for her to be seen by the
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gynecologist. She then returned home to await the deliberation
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of the the theraputic abortion committee. On the second trip the
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procedure was carried out in a Toronto hospital.
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Mr. and Mrs. R. were fortunate. They had the financial resources
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that enabled Mrs. R. to go to such extraordinary lengths to get the help
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she needed. But many Canadians are not so fortunate. These are the women
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who do not have the money to travel great distances to get abortions
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denied them in their own communities. They include married women who
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have children and whose contraceptive methods prove ineffective, as well
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as adolescent girls who get pregnant unwittingly, out of sexual
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ignorance.
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What are the options open to such a woman? She is unable to get
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a legal medical service from her local hospital because that instution
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interprets our abortion law in a manner which denies her the treatment
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that her physician recommends. Keep in mind that her health insurance
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premiums support that hospital. She cannot afford to travel to a larger
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centre where the same abortion law is interpreted in a manner which
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might enable her to receive help.
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Her list of options has already shrunk considerably. Unless she
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is willing to seek out and pay for the services of an illegal
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abortionist, she must submit to a state of compulsory pregnancy. Since
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very few married women with children are prepared to give up their
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new-born babies for adoption, this woman and her mate become, by
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definition, parents by compulsion.
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As Garret Hardin ("Abortion - Or Compulsory Pregnancy?" Journal
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of Marriage and the Family, xxx (May, 1968) 246-251) has pointed out, if
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the state denies a woman a safe legal abortion in the early stages of
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pregnancy before viability, it is accurate to say that she enters a
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state of compulsory pregnancy. By the same token, abortion laws which
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allow hospital abortion committees to deny women safe legal abortions
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are actually compulsory pregnancy laws, even thought that legislation is
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interpreted elsewhere in a way which makes abortion services available
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to unwillingly pregnant women.
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At first glance, the label "compulsory pregnancy" seems unduly
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emotive. Phrases like "pro-abortion" and "pro-life" inflame the passions
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and raise the temperature of the debate as well as the blood pressure of
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the debaters, but they shed little light on this complex subject. Is the
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term "compulsory pregnancy" all that inflammatory? It is true that the
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state did not force these couples to have sexual intercourse on the
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night that the woman became unwillingly pregnant; nor did the physicians
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on the theraputic abortion committee do anything to thwart the couple's
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attempts to contracept. Yet a hospital's legally constituted theraputic
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abortion committee, in denying any woman a safe medical abortion in the
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early stages of pregnancy, clearly intends her to remain pregnant
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against her will. Is not the label "compulsory pregnant" an appropriate
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one to attach to that state of affairs?"
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Compulsory Parenthood - The Truth about Abortion
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(Wendell W. Watters, M.D.) 1976
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Family planning has been called "a new and important freedom in
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the world." (Frank W. Notestein, "Zero Population Growth: What is it?"
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Family Planning Perspective, II, (June 1970) No. 3, 22.) In 1968 the UN
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International Conference on Human Rights declared that "Any choice or
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decision with regard to the size of the family must irrevocably rest
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with the family itself and cannot be made by anyone else." It then went
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on to state that this parental right to free choice would remain
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illusory unless couples were aware of the alternatives.
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On the basis of availability fo adequate educational and
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clinical services alone, family planning has a long way to go. Any
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freedom of choice is only a paper right unless the individual has the
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knowledge and the tools with which to exercise that freedom. But even if
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adequated educational and clinical services were universally available,
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would family planning, in the presence of restrictive abortion laws,
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become the human freedom envisioned in the United Nations Declaration of
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Human Rights? Contraceptives are not always available, unwanted
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pregnancy still occurs because of human fallibility, and because no
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known method of contraception is completely foolproof, a fact to which
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thousands of couples can testify. In family planning, a freedom that
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stops at conception is a non-freedom. Until safe legal abortion
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services, completely free of all medico-legal harassment, are available
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to all womean who choose to use the abortion option, the UN
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Declaration's family planning clause confers a paper right on the women
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of the world.
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(Cont'd next message)
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Compulsory Parenthood - The Truth about Abortion
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Wendell W. Watters, M.D. (1976)
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In a few jurisdictions abortion is available on the request
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of the woman herself, and at the recommendation of her physician. In
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many countries abortion is illegal under all circumstances. In other
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countries it is legal under certain circumstances, but never simply on
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the grounds that the woman wishes not to be pregnant. IN CANADA, FOR
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EXAMPLE, UNDER SECTION 251 OF THE CRIMINAL CODE, ABORTIONS ARE LEGAL IF
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THERE IS A RISK TO THE WOMAN'S HEALTH IN CONTINUING THE PREGNANCY, AND
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ONLY IF THE ABORTION IS APPROVED BY A THERAPUTIC ABORTION COMMITTEE IN A
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HOSPITAL.
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The criteria by which a committee operates are never made public
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and the committees rarely interview the women herself who,
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interestingly, cannot appeal a negative decision. The physician members
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of a committee that denies a woman a safe, legal abortion are not
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charged with any medico-legal responsibility for her subsequent welfare
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of that of the child. Peculiarly, this responsibility continues to
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reside with her own physician, whose attempts to have the pregnancy
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terminated have been blocked. Few Canadians realize how effectively the
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government and various power blocs make it almost impossible for many
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Canadian women to take advantage of our ostensibly liberal abortion law.
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The law does not require a hospital to provide abortion services, and
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many do not, especially in areas where anti-abortion power blocs control
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local hospital policies.
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Abortion is a moral issue; more accurately, it is many moral
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issues. The central question is the value placed on the foetus. Can
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there be such a thing as foetal rights? This one question has pushed
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aside other ethical issues.
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Abortion is not an acceptable means of birth control, nor is it
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individually or socially desirable. We need to reduce the need for
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abortion through improved sex education programs in schools, additional
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training for health-care professionals in family planning, and research
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into contraceptive technology. Unless a technically perfect
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contraceptive, and a perfectly motivated human being are developed, the
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need for abortion services will stay.
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The abortion issue also forces us to deal with other questions
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about human reproductivity; questions that go beyond the matter of
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whether a nonviable foetus is human or has a soul. How important is the
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act of creating a new human life? Should society persist in the
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'laissea-faire' approach in which a new life is an almost automatic
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consequence of unprotected sex? Or should society expect some judgment
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on the part of the sexually active couple who choose to become parents?
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-(Compulsory Parenthood - The Truth about Abortion)
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Author: Wendell W. Watters, M.D. 1976
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