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- From: dking@raul.nas.nasa.gov (Dan King)
- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Subject: Re: Medical Enforcers?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.002117.10889@nas.nasa.gov>
- Date: 17 Nov 92 00:21:17 GMT
- References: <1992Nov9.184241.12652@nas.nasa.gov> <1992Nov9.231922.16381@midway.uchicago.edu> <1992Nov10.223901.14440@nas.nasa.gov> <1992Nov13.204558.22806@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@nas.nasa.gov (News Administrator)
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- Organization: NAS Program, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
- Lines: 153
-
-
- This post has gotten a little long. I cut out the parts of Elizabeths
- proposed legislation that I figure would not be quite as dangerous
- and left out what I felt was the main dangers of her proposal.
-
- eb>In article <1992Nov13.204558.22806@midway.uchicago.edu> eeb1@quads.uchicago.edu (e elizabeth bartley) writes:
- dk>In article <1992Nov10.223901.14440@nas.nasa.gov> dking@raul.nas.nasa.gov (Dan King) writes:
-
- dk>So you require medical approval prior to the abortion, but judicial
- dk>approval after.
-
- eb>If full medical approval (two concurring opinions) is obtained prior
- eb>to the abortion, the judicial approval is presumed given -- and if
- eb>it's withheld, all that happens is that the doctors in question can't
- eb>presume judicial approval again....
-
- So under your scheme, third tri-mester abortion would not be a
- personal decision between a woman and her doctor. It would now
- be a decision between a woman, her certified abortionist, and
- another certified abortionist with potential for the decision
- to be far from private by subjectating it to judicial review.
- Sounds like a huge change just for a problem that you have so
- far failed to identify.
-
- eb>My suggested proposal potentially involves the judicial process, as
- eb>all laws potentially involve the judicial process; it is invoked if a
- eb>wrongdoing is charged. If the full medical approval is given, the
- eb>judicial process is invoked only if there's a reason to believe
- eb>something's wrong.
-
- Do you have any kind of ball park figures for how often this would be?
- Guess how many cases groups such as the National Right to Life
- Committee or Operation Rescue are going to challenge these doctor's
- decisions? Can you imagine them not challenging a doctor's decision
- if given the chance? I would guess you'd want to include some sort
- of de incentives to keep them from constantly creating nuisance
- challenges. I have trouble thinking of de incentives strong enough
- to stop a group like OR from using your new legislation to challenge
- each and every third tri-mester abortion. Hell, I could even
- imagine them challenging second tri-mester abortions in attempt
- to force doctors to prove they were truly second tri-mester
- abortions. Does giving a group like O.R. another tool for them
- to use bother you at all?
-
- dk>Is this some sort of new certification program you want to set up?
-
- eb>It might be.
-
- This could be just part of the reason I am assuming a bureaucracy
- that you apparently are not.
-
- dk>Who is going to review all these abortion decisions?
-
- eb>No one unless wrongdoing is charged, with some facts to back the
- eb>charge up.
-
- And who is going to decide if there is enough facts? Almost every
- abortion that can be challenged will be by the fetus fanatics.
- Some part of the judiciary is going to need to decide if there
- is enough facts to go to trial. It would seem you have this
- belief that there is some sort of consensus of what constitutes
- therapeutic abortion. There is no such consensus among the
- medical community, let alone the legal community. Here in T.A.
- DOD and some of his cohorts are pushing for a very narrow
- definition of health. As an example, do you see any kind of
- consensus if a therapeutic abortion would be allowed if two
- doctors believe there is a 20% chance of a woman being
- permanently crippled if she continues a pregnancy? Is there
- some percent you would allow an abortion, and some were you
- wouldn't? What kind of proof would you require from a doctor
- to support his estimate of percentage?
-
- dk>Who is going to review all these abortion decisions?
-
- eb>No one unless wrongdoing is charged, with some facts to back the
- eb>charge up.
-
- I can guarantee that fetus fanatics such as O.R. will challenge
- every abortion possible under your new scheme.
-
- dk>Who is going to keep track of all abortions?
-
- eb>No one; doctors keep records anyway for fear of malpractice suits and
- eb>those records can be subpeonaed if there's a reason to presume
- eb>wrongdoing. The records could of course be falsified, but so could
- eb>anything the doctors sent in.
-
- So you'll believe their records but not them?
-
- eb>You're assuming a bureaucracy I'm not.
-
- eb>You are assuming the judiciary process reviews every single abortion
- eb>performed in the third trimester. I'm assuming a system whereby
- eb>review is possible if there's reason to believe wrongdoing, but review
- eb>is not performed unless a credible charge of wrongdoing is made.
-
- There is no way every single possible abortion will not be
- brought to question by OR. At the minimum each questioning
- will add bureaucracy.
-
- There is no way you can get the government involved in something
- and not increase bureaucracy. This is how the government functions.
- You want to include abortion certification, multiple certified
- doctor approval and judicial approval of abortions that are third
- tri-mester and might be close to third tri-mester and you don't
- believe this will add bureaucracy? I don't share your optimism.
-
- eb>As an analogy, think about a decent system of laws against child
- eb>abuse. If a charge is made, it's investigated and something is done
- eb>if it's found accurate. But the police don't come to everyone's home
- eb>to see if if they're beating up their kids.
-
- A huge difference between the two groups is you do not have a
- group of well organized and financed people willing to do
- anything to separate parents from their children. If you did
- then I would guess they would be very willing to use child
- abuse laws to accomplish their goals. To set up laws with
- out that in mind would be extremely naive. And it would also
- be very stupid to do it if you were not aware of any child
- abuse happening anytime in the past. Why create needless
- and possibly dangerous laws to deal with a non-problem?
-
- eb>In the normal case, the added burden on the woman would be going to a
- eb>second doctor, and the taxpayers would pay the doctor's bill. In a
- eb>medical emergency, the doctor would perform an abortion and justify it
- eb>after the fact. That would be somewhat unpleasant, but if it's enough
- eb>of a medicial emergency that an abortion couldn't wait for a second
- eb>opinion, it shouldn't be all that difficult to prove that the abortion
- eb>was necessary.
-
- But the proving would have to be done. The doctor would have to
- go into a court of law and justify why he performed this abortion.
- He will not know if the judge is prejudice toward him or the
- fetus fanatics bringing the charges. He will not know, because
- it will not be spelled out in this feel-good legislation what
- exactly constitutes a therapeutic abortion. I kind of get the
- feeling many doctors will be very leery of performing legitimate
- therapeutic abortions under your legislation.
-
- Again I ask why are you adding all these dangers and what not
- for a problem you have admitted in the past does not exist.
- For a woman to get a late term abortion for "trivial" reasons
- it would first require a woman that would decide to do this
- late in term rather than early and then finding a doctor
- willing to do it. I have seen no facts to support anyones
- suspicion that this is happening.
-
- >Pro-Choice Anti-Roe - E. Elizabeth Bartley
- > Abortions should be safe, legal, early, and rare.
-
- Okay, but why legislated?
-
- Dan King
-