Posted on 04/25/2016 11:09:41 AM PDT by Morgana
Its not long before the do-it-yourself abortion pill Mifegymiso will be available in Canada. Expected to be prescribed as early as this summer, the combination of two medications, taken a day or two apart, usually at home, is considered an effective way to end the life of pre-born children up to 7 weeks old.
A recent article in the National Post presents the regulations around the pill, and the response. Pro-abortion groups are angry about the need for this medication to be prescribed by a physician, as well as the fact that doctors may choose to have the patient ingest the first dose in their office. In apparent evidence of their desire to make this a game-changer for easing access to abortion in Canada, they want to ignore the warnings of potential harm with which these drugs come. Blood infections, hemorrhages, one (non-fatal) heart attack it is no wonder this drug took 4 years to be approved, due to insufficient or missing safety data. You would think a group that claims to be focused on womens health would be a little concerned with safety data.
In addition, the concern is raised that prescription of the pill requires a doctor appointment, with an ultrasound to determine the gestational age of the baby. Again, if were concerned about women, we should insist she see an actual doctor, shouldnt we? If the pregnancy is farther along than she claims, complications also increase. Taking drugs designed to make you bleed quickly, painfully and heavily is not recommended for just anyone.
A further point of contention for abortion access advocates is the doctors option to have the first dose administered in the office. These advocates argue that the purpose of these drugs should be to revolutionize abortion access in Canada. This revolution would allow anyone, anywhere, to get these drugs quickly and quietly in the mail, and deal with the aftermath in the privacy of her own home, where she can pass it off as a natural miscarriage or never tell anyone at all.
Unfortunately, this free-for-all undermines actual care for women. To suggest it is unreasonable to see the patient take the medication says they are willing to open up vulnerable women to likely abuses of such a drug. This is not just prescribing a medication someones teenager may sneak to get high, this is choosing to end a developing life. It seems fairly important that the woman asking for the drug is in fact the woman using the drug. Otherwise, if you have a girlfriend, daughter, or student you accidentally impregnated you could find a way to get these drugs and then slip a few pills into their smoothie orpass them the antibiotic their doctor prescribed. So much for choice.
The abortion pill is already a travesty in Canada. In the womb, the place that should be the safest for a pre-born child, she is deliberately targeted by a medication that thins the uterine lining on which she depends and then, while shes barely hanging on, follows up with strong contractions to force her out of her haven into arms waiting with a hand on the toilet paper roll and an elbow on the flush handle. To suggest that we still arent making it convenient enough for a woman to kill her baby goes beyond all comprehensible moral standards. If other contract killers had half these conveniences, you can bet the mafia would have taken over the world.
It is safe for her but it kills the human inside of her.
Color me a bit skeptical
It’s not safe for her either.
Very safe. Kills the baby but not the mother.
No. It kills the mother too, sometimes.
It’s sickening
Just wait until a bunch of women end up dead. You can’t take something that will kill the baby without also causing problems for the mother as well.
Which tells you all you need to know. It's about abortion. More, not less. "Safe" is a slogan, not a requirement.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.