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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!sgiblab!darwin.sura.net!convex!linac!uchinews!quads!eeb1
- From: eeb1@quads.uchicago.edu (e elizabeth bartley)
- Subject: Re: Medical Enforcers? (Was: Holtsinger on Harassment & Health)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov13.212414.23792@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: eeb1@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: University of Chicago Computing Organizations
- References: <1992Nov9.184241.12652@nas.nasa.gov> <1992Nov9.231922.16381@midway.uchicago.edu> <BxIJxF.ItJ.2@cs.cmu.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1992 21:24:14 GMT
- Lines: 106
-
- In article <BxIJxF.ItJ.2@cs.cmu.edu> garvin+@cs.cmu.edu (Susan Garvin) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov9.231922.16381@midway.uchicago.edu>
- >eeb1@midway.uchicago.edu writes:
- >#In article <1992Nov9.184241.12652@nas.nasa.gov>
- >#dking@raul.nas.nasa.gov (Dan King) writes:
- >##In article <1992Nov8.064722.10308@midway.uchicago.edu>
- >##eeb1@quads.uchicago.edu (e elizabeth bartley) writes:
-
- >###I've recently made it clear that I support requiring medical approval,
- >###not judicial approval....
-
- >She says, and then goes on to define medical approval as something
- >that requires judicial approval exp post.
-
- Only if an abortion was performed before a second opinion could be
- given. If a second opinion concurs with the necessity and an abortion
- is performed, there's no investigation of the mater unless a credible
- charge that the abortion was unnecessary is made.
-
- >#In an emergency, any doctor qualified to diagnose if a third-term
- >#abortion is need and to perform one could go ahead and perform one but
- >#might have to justify the abortion afterwards. (Of course, if he
- >#doesn't perform one and she dies, there's no "might" about him having
- >#to justify his lack of treatment.)
-
- >This certainly doesn't keep the judiciary out of the equation. It
- >does, however, make the doctor's decision more complicated, and
- >might result in that doctor doing something that would endanger
- >the woman's health (but keep her alive) because of the hassle of
- >explaining the decision to abort to the courts.
-
- 1) He runs a significantly higher risk of getting into trouble if the
- woman is injured because she didn't have an abortion than he does if
- he performs an abortion.
-
- 2) That's why the default of no judicial review given a concurring
- opinion, and why (barring proof of bribery or one doctor lying to the
- other) the worst that can be done if a judicial review *is* performed
- is not let the doctor perform another third-trimester abortion without
- a higher level of judicial review afterwards.
-
- [my explanation of two concuring qualified doctors performing an
- abortion with the worst consequences for the doctors as above deleted]
-
- >Any M.D. can diagnose any illness, legally speaking. I called the
- >AMA and checked. Board certification implies expertise, it is not
- >a requirement to practice. It sounds as if a new form of regulation
- >is being suggested for physicians.
-
- Hm. Let's restore some of the above:
-
- >#In other cases, doctors who are certified qualified to diagnose
- >#conditions which require an abortion (ask the AMA who; I would guess
- >#all gynecologists and some others)
-
- If the default condition is that all M.D.s are presumed qualified to
- treat everything, I'll go with that and trust that podiatrists will
- have the sense not to diagnose ectopic pregnancies (though I don't
- think that's relevant to third-trimester abortions)....
-
- I am proposing a new regulation, as follows: if two doctors perform an
- third-trimester abortion, someone presents a reason why it wasn't
- medically necessary, this is investigated and it's found it wasn't
- medically necessary, the two doctors involved are presumed incompetant
- to diagnose whether third-trimester abortions are necessary and all
- future third-trimester abortions they preform will be investigated.
- If one of them then performs a third-trimester abortion after this
- point and it's found medically unnecessary, then real penalities are
- quite possible.
-
- >I'm at a loss as to how Beth thinks that this will prevent
- >"unnecessary" late term abortions in a way that they are not
- >currently prevented, other than denying women who are carrying
-
- I think it will deny abortions in cases of rape and a handful of
- sex-selection abortions.
-
- >severely deformed or dead fetuses their right to abort. I
-
- I've gone into this at greater length in my response to Dan -- two
- concurring doctors' opinions, state pays for the second, no judicial
- review unless a reason for it comes up, the worst that the doctors
- face (barring proof that they took bribes or one lied to the other) is
- not being able to perform another third-trimester abortion without
- possibility of significant legal penalty.
-
- >know that there are only a few doctors who will perform late
- >abortions now, and I know that at least one of them refuses to
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- >do them when he thinks they aren't necessary. This still sounds
-
- So there's at least a possibility that a couple of doctors perform
- third trimester abortions on demand.
-
- >like legislation for its own sake, with the added frill of
- >more government interference in medicine via new forms of
- >certification.
-
- Don't forget: I think third-trimester abortions are killing a possible
- person. Regulating this is *not* legislation for its own sake for me.
-
- --
- Pro-Choice Anti-Roe - E. Elizabeth Bartley
- Abortions should be safe, legal, early, and rare.
-
- Cthulhu for President -- when you're tired of voting for the lesser of 2 evils.
-