In looking at the pregnancy itself as the disease, abortion is, logically, a fast cure. As long as the physician is taking a purely biological, narrow, limited view of his patient, an effective abortion that successfully kills the fetus and ends the pregnant state will be, by definition, a success. He need think no further about his patient and her well-being.
But if we look beyond mere biology and see the woman as a person, does accomplishing the death of the fetus and the termination of the pregnant state necessarily accomplish the goal of easing her distress?
The anguish many women experience after abortion would indicate that this can not be presumed. A physician who sees his patient not simply as a uterus to be emptied, but as a human being, is interested in her full well-being. He wants whatever treatment he provides to have a satisfactory long-term outcome for his patient. He wants to alleviate her distress, not increase it. And in abortion, the risk of increasing the distress is very real. And it is, after all, the distress, not the pregnant state itself, that is really the presenting problem in a prospective abortion patient.
I would like to step aside from abortion for a moment to look at another type of elective surgery intended to alleviate distress: cosmetic surgery.
If the surgeon looks upon his patient purely as a body, then a surgery that increases breast size or changes the shape of the patient's nose is by definition successful, regardless of whether or not the patient is relieved of whatever distress led her to the surgeon's office in the first place. A responsible cosmetic surgeon will see his patient as a human being, whose entire well-being he will address. And even a cursory online search will find that competent and caring cosmetic surgeons do see their patients as complex human beings, not simply as breasts or noses or chins. They are very concerned about the long-term well-being of their patients. Even a brief Google search is enough to produce ample evidence of this concern:
Finally, a more self-serving piece that is nevertheless very relevant:
I have seen only one person working in abortion practice -- Charlotte Taft -- that showed any real concern about the long-term impact on the woman's life. In routine abortion practice, it is simply assumed that the pregnancy itself is the entire problem, that ending the pregnancy eliminates the problem, and that any woman who suffers ill effects after her abortion is just a whiny, complaining nutcase who doesn't appreciate how fortunate she is to have had easy access to a quick abortion.
The woman on the abortion table, far from being treated as a valuable and complex human being, is treated like a uterus to be emptied and forgotten. After the abortion she is callously dismissed, sometimes to the point of being shoved out the door to die.
What evidence can anybody present that abortion practitioners actually see each patient as an individual, whose long-term well being is their primary concern?
2 comments:
Good comparision. I've another for you: chronic pain. If a pain clinic saw a patient as just a pain problem they'd give them whatever was necessary to relieve the pain *right then* and then out the door with you! But of course they don't. Medicine is carefully monitored to make sure people aren't over or under medicated, follow up care is mandatory, frequent questions about mental health and coping are mandatory, screenings for secondary issues, and even with all that a patient might not get the 'best' treatment because what will kill the pain *this instant* might not be good long term and what is going to do best long term has to be considered. So someone might have to live with a certain level or chronic pain on a daily basis, even though it's depressing and hard on the body and spirit, even though an 'easy out' exists for immediate relief, because it's the level of treatment/medication that can be sustained safely over years or a lifetime. Abortion says women have a problem that needs a *now* solution regardless of what that does long term, every other medical field bases it's treatment on what is needed and necessary for long term health, whether or not that fully relieves the *now* problem.
Excellent point, Jes.
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