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Doctors and Insurance PDF
Friday, 19 December 2008 14:04

The following is an article published in the Newsweekly magazine.

Doctors complaints about rising costs of insurance are news at the moment. While one has sympathy for an obstetrician who is sued when a baby is unexpectedly disabled, there is another area of the specialty which deserves no sympathy: the abortion industry. The medical profession and particularly Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists is culpable for not policing this industry to ensure that proper standards are maintained. Contrast between care given to patients with other surgery compared to lack of care given to women presenting for abortion is stark.

Surgeons take a medical history and explain all the options - often surgery is not the best treatment and there are less drastic solutions. Doctors who would take a dim view of a colleague who removed 99% of healthy appendixes from healthy patients, condone the removal of thousands of healthy fetuses from healthy mothers.

Abortionists often do not see their clients before the procedure - aborted women complain they did not even know his name and "he wouldn't look me in the eye", (in one litigated case the only counselling was from a trainee social worker) and unlike other surgery, there is no follow-up.
Abortionists do not take a family medical history - particularly negligent because if there is a family history of depression or mental illness, the woman may fall into the 10% category, who following abortion, are left seriously dysfunctional.

If there is family history of breast cancer, the risk of breast cancer following abortion will increase substantially. In the study by (pro-choice) Janet Daling, University of Washington, 1994, every woman who had an abortion under age 18 and who also had a family history of breast cancer, developed breast cancer by age 45. Abortion clinics in the USA now warn of "possible increased lifetime risk of breast cancer". There have been at least two legal settlements in Australia for failure to warn of increased breast cancer risk, and more are in the pipeline. The first case has also been filed in the UK.

On abortion-breast cancer risk the RANZCOG says the data is "inconclusive". Would they recommend anyone get on a plane if the airline stated that 28 claims the plane was going to crash were "inconclusive"? And which insurer would provide coverage? The RCOG knows that a woman who has an abortion in her teens or early twenties and then does not have a baby until she is 29 (average for first births in Australia) has substantially increased her breast cancer risk by delaying her first full-term pregnancy.

Some of the highest damages payouts awarded against doctors have been where babies have cerebral palsy. Premature births are one of the major causes of cerebral palsy and abortion can leave a woman with an "incompetent cervix", resulting in premature birth and cererbral palsy for the subsequent "wanted" baby. If obstetricians want to reduce risks of delivering premature babies, they should outlaw abortions.

The growing problem of "infertility" and demand for IVF, surrogate motherhood etc, are also related to prior abortions.

The "Disclosure & Consent to Medical & Surgical Procedures" form for Termination of Pregnancy or Suction Curretage or Abortion, of the Woman's Choice Quality Health Centre, San Antonio, Texas, USA, reads as follows:

"I also realise that the following risks and hazards may occur in connection with this particular procedure & even death:
(a) Bleeding with the possibility of requring further surgery &/or hysterectomy to control,
(b) Perforation (holes in) uterus &/or damage to the bladder, bowel, blood vessel,
(c) Abdominal incision & operation to correct the injury,
(d) infection of female organs:uterus, tubes, ovaries,
(e) sterility or being incapable of bearing children,
(f) Incompetent cervix
(g) failure to remove all products of the conception,
(h) continuation of the pregnancy
(i) depression or " the blues",
(j) Post abortion stress syndrome
(k) possible increased lifetime risk of breast cancer.

Under threat of litigation, the abortion industry is belatedly acknowledging risks of abortion, denied for so long. Abortion is medically unnecessary and it is the joint failure of governments and the medical profession to inform or protect women from abortion trauma that is driving victims to legal redress. By
barring pregnancy support helpers from clinic doors, governments and abortionists have connived in preventing women from hearing about other options. (It's as if specialists physically barred women from hearing a second opinion.) Funding pregnancy support is not enough - when a frightened teenager or
disadvantaged woman presents for abortion is when she needs to hear that other help is available and that surgery is unnecessary. A shutdown of the abortion industry would reduce insurance and litigation costs.

Content copyright of Newsweek™.

 

About the author Peter

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