ProWomanProLife

  • The Story
  • The Women
  • Notable Columns
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / All Posts / New guidelines won’t help…

New guidelines won’t help…

September 9, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 7 Comments

…when humanity is dead:

Miss Capewell, who has a five-year-old daughter Jodie, went into labour in October last year at 21 weeks and four days after suffering problems during her pregnancy.

She said she was told that because she had not reached 22 weeks, she was not allowed injections to try to stop the labour, or a steroid injection to help to strengthen her baby’s lungs.

Instead, doctors told her to treat the labour as a miscarriage, not a birth, and to expect her baby to be born with serious deformities or even to be still-born. She told how she begged one paediatrician, ‘You have got to help’, only for the man to respond: ‘No we don’t.’

_____________________

Tanya adds: A family member of mine went through the identical thing, only with twins. We mourn them to this day, and though the babies both breathed on their own for a couple of hours outside the womb, the hospital called it a miscarriage. I have a lot of words for what happened; ‘miscarriage’ isn’t one of them.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedintumblrmailby feather

Filed Under: All Posts

Comments

  1. BillyHW says

    September 9, 2009 at 2:32 pm

    But at least she got a free lunch.

    Reply
  2. Suricou Raven says

    September 10, 2009 at 11:13 am

    I’m going with the doctors on this one: If the baby is almost certinly going to die with or without help, it’s pointless to cause further stress to the mother – at best, all it gives her is another week of hope. At worst, the baby by some miracle lives with severe brain damage. Best to just not intervene.

    I tried to find some statistics on survival rates – it’s 20 to 35% at 23 weeks, according to wikipedia. No statistics on earlier than that that I could find.

    Reply
  3. Dan says

    September 10, 2009 at 11:51 am

    Suricou, you didn’t read the piece very carefully. They refused to do anything to stop the labour, which is one thing that could have saved the baby.

    And then there is that little word “almost” that you used. How would you like it if you had a condition for which the survival rate is only 10% with medical intervention (and zero without intervention), and the doctors told you “you are almost certainly going to die with or without help, therefore we are refusing to treat you”? That’s exactly the logic that you are using.

    Reply
  4. SarahB says

    September 10, 2009 at 1:17 pm

    I know a little boy who was born at 22 weeks and a few days. He’s now in first grade, perfectly healthy, no brain damage. Certainly not all children born at that stage progress so well but their chances of surviving and thriving are improving all the time.

    My own OB-GYN treated a pregnant woman whose water broke at 4 months. With drugs and other interventions they were able to keep the baby in for two more months. She is now a healthy toddler.

    At this stage of pregnancy even a few more days in utero can make an enormous difference in the baby’s chances. I find it appalling that the doctors in this in this instance didn’t try to do more to help this woman and her child.

    Reply
  5. Suricou Raven says

    September 11, 2009 at 6:09 am

    I’m still sideing with the doctors. They know what they are doing. I don’t. Unless you are a qualified ob-gyn, nor do you. Besides, this report is from the Daily Mail. The Daily Mail lies. Frequently. They love to get their readers angry or upset, because emotional readers buy more papers. I wouldn’t trust them not to have ommited some piece of medically vital information – perhaps a reason the labor couldn’t be delayed, or the risks doing so would have posed to the mother, or information suggesting the fetus to be severely damaged. I’m certinly not going to trust the woman on this – the one who has been through severe emotional trauma, has lost her baby, and who is now out searching for someone to blame. Even if she isn’t deliberatly distorting things, her memory cannot be considered reliable.

    This is a simple matter of unreliable unreliable information rendering it impossible for me to judge the situation for myself, thus requiring I defer to those people who were both better informed on this particular case and better educated in the field: The doctors.

    Reply
  6. Dan says

    September 11, 2009 at 11:01 am

    What is being strongly implied here is that the doctors made a moral decision, not a medical one. And in that realm, they are no more qualified to make a decision than we are.

    Reply
  7. Helene Ryles says

    September 12, 2009 at 6:54 pm

    As a premmie myself, I think it’s very sad that this should happen.
    Even sadder is the fact that some people condone the doctor’s decision.

    There are two other cases of babies surviving in the 21 week although they are both nearly 22 weeks.

    Everyone deserves a chance.

    Helene

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow Us

Facebooktwitterrssby feather

Notable Columns

  • A pro-woman budget wouldn't tell me how to live my life
  • Bad medicine
  • Birth control pills have side effects
  • Canada Summer Jobs debacle–Can Trudeau call abortion a right?
  • Celebrate these Jubilee jailbirds
  • China has laws against sex selection. But not Canada. Why?
  • Family love is not a contract
  • Freedom to discuss the “choice”
  • Gender quotas don't help business or women
  • Ghomeshi case a wake-up call
  • Hidden cost of choice
  • Life at the heart of the matter
  • Life issues and the media
  • Need for rational abortion debate
  • New face of the abortion debate
  • People vs. kidneys
  • PET-P press release
  • Pro-life work is making me sick
  • Prolife doesn't mean anti-woman
  • Settle down or "lean in"
  • Sex education is all about values
  • Thank you, Camille Paglia
  • The new face of feminism
  • Today’s law worth discussing
  • When debate is shut down in Canada’s highest places

Categories

  • All Posts
  • Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia
  • Charitable
  • Ethics
  • Featured Media
  • Featured Posts
  • Feminism
  • Free Expression
  • International
  • Motherhood
  • Other
  • Political
  • Pregnancy Care Centres
  • Reproductive Technologies

All Posts

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2022 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in