PUBLICATION: The London Free Press
DATE: 2005.06.29
EDITION: Final
SECTION: Opinion Pages
PAGE: A7
BYLINE: L. L. DEVEBER, FREELANCE WRITER deVeber Institute for Bioethics and Social Research in Toronto.
COLUMN: Rebuttal
ILLUSTRATION: photo by Dave Chidley, The London Free Press TWO SIDES OF DEBATE: Paul Sanders, left, and Heidi William, two protesters from opposite sides of the abortion debate, sit and talk outside a fenced-off area near Alumni Hall as the University of Western Ontario presented an honorary doctor of laws degree to Henry Morgentaler at controversial convocation ceremonies June 16.

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ABORTION'S LINGERING DAMAGE

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After reviewing the various letters to the editor supporting abortion on demand and Henry Morgentaler, I would like to make a few comments and corrections.

Pro-life supporters come from various moral and religious backgrounds, but they all want to see the unborn child or fetus given some recognition and status so it cannot be eliminated simply because it's not wanted.

They see a small, defenceless human individual, which at seven weeks has a heart beat and brain activity, and by 14 weeks is fully developed. By 20 to 24 weeks these babies become viable, as in rare cases they can survive outside the womb.

About this time, before birth, they can have intrauterine surgery on the heart and other organs, at which point they become patients.

Of course, they have no legal status until a miraculous passage through the birth canal, when it is recognized by everyone as a legal human being.

However, since abortion supporters choose to ignore these facts, they should be concerned about complications following abortions that are increasingly reported in scientific literature:

  1) A study sponsored by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, in 2001 showed that 41,000 women who had abortions had five times the number of hospital admissions for psychiatric problems, compared to a similar number of women who had no abortion. This was a short-term study done at three months, and did not deal with long-term effects of abortion.
2) A study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal in 2003 showed an increase number of psychiatric admissions among lower-income women who had induced abortions.
3) A Finnish study of the records of 600,000 women showed a six-fold increase in suicides in post-abortion women compared to those with a live birth, three times the incidence of women in general. There are other published studies in Britain and the U.S. showing similar findings.
4) It is obvious there are large numbers of women with post-abortion psychological problems, judging by the growth of hundreds of related counselling centres in North America, the largest being Project Rachel.

The pro-choice counselling service, Healing Choice, estimates at least 10 per cent of post-abortion women have severe psychological problems, and that many others who appear to have "moved forward with their lives" suffer various degrees of guilt, grief and ambivalence, sometimes for the rest of their lives. There are documented cases of women expressing grief, guilt and spiritual pain on their death beds many decades after an abortion.

Besides these psychological problems, there are documented medical problems that are less common, yet still significant, such as subsequent premature deliveries, infertility and increased risk of breast cancer. The incidence of maternal mortality from induced abortions is unknown (Statistics Canada), since maternal deaths after abortion are classified by the cause of death (hemmorrhage, infection, etc.) and not by the procedure itself.

Although post-abortion problems may not affect the majority of women, the number of women affected is significant when one considers more than a million abortions have occurred in Canada over the last 10 years.

Finally, one wonders what sort of informed consent is offered women considering abortion, in view of the problems cited in the literature. In the United States, there are at least 12 states with right-to-know laws stipulating what information should be presented to these women, which I presume is more detailed than what women in Canada are offered.

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GARRY BREITKREUZ’S MOTION FOR A “WOMEN’S RIGHT TO KNOW ACT”

PRIVATE MEMBERS' NOTICES OF MOTIONS AVIS DE MOTIONS ÉMANANT DES DÉPUTÉS
M-70 — December 13, 2004 — Mr. Breitkreuz (Yorkton—Melville) — On or after Wednesday, December 22, 2004 — That, in the opinion of the House, the government should work with the provinces to introduce measures requiring that all women considering an abortion be given complete information by their physician about all the known risks of the procedure and that this information be adequately understood by the woman before she is referred for an abortion. M-70 — 13 décembre 2004 — M. Breitkreuz (Yorkton—Melville) — À compter du mercredi 22 décembre 2004 — Que, de l'avis de la Chambre, le gouvernement devrait collaborer avec les provinces afin de mettre en place des mesures garantissant que toutes les femmes envisageant un avortement reçoivent des renseignements complets de leur médecin concernant tous les risques connus de cette procédure, et que ces renseignements sont bien compris par ces femmes avant qu’elles ne soient aiguillées vers un service d’avortement.