Posted on 04/06/2004 2:08:50 PM PDT by churchillbuff
LINCOLN, Neb. - A type of abortion banned under a new federal law would cause "severe and excruciating" pain to 20-week-old fetuses, a medical expert on pain testified Tuesday.
"I believe the fetus is conscious," said Dr. Kanwaljeet "Sonny" Anand, a pediatrician at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. He took the stand as a government witness in a trial challenging the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.
The act, which was signed by President Bush (news - web sites) in November, has not been enforced because judges in Lincoln, Neb., New York and San Francisco agreed to hear evidence in three simultaneous, non-jury trials on whether the ban violates the Constitution.
Anand said fetuses show increased heart rate, blood flow and hormone levels in response to pain.
"The physiological responses have been very clearly studied," he said. "The fetus cannot talk ... so this is the best evidence we can get."
The Bush administration has argued that the procedure, referred to by opponents as "partial-birth abortion," is "inhumane and gruesome" and causes the fetus to suffer pain.
During the procedure, which doctors call "intact dilation and extraction" or D&X, a fetus is partially removed from the womb and its skull is punctured. It is generally performed in the second trimester.
Abortion rights advocates argue that it is sometimes the safest procedure for women, and that the law will endanger almost all second-trimester abortions, or 10 percent of the nation's 1.3 million annual abortions.
The law would be the first substantial limitation on abortion since the Supreme Court legalized it 31 years ago in the landmark case Roe v. Wade (news - web sites).
Challenges to the ban were filed by several doctors being represented by the Center for Reproductive Rights, the National Abortion Federation (news - web sites) and the Planned Parenthood (news - web sites) Federation of America. The issue is expected to reach the U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites).
I don't choose to disbelieve things just because I viscerally dislike them, and people who follow such a path are essentially worthless human beings (c.f. socialists). There are a lot of facts about the world that we live in that I definitely do not like and wish weren't true, but I'm not going to stick my head in the sand and pretend that those facts aren't true just because it would be more comfortable to believe so. As it happens, I am actually indifferent to the fact that the human brain doesn't bootstrap out of reptilian mode until after birth. I don't see what difference that actually makes -- a lot of human equipment doesn't fully function until longer after the brain does.
It is worth noting that the reason the higher brain functions and structures do not develop until after birth is that it would necessarily greatly increase the size of the baby's head, which already has a difficult time getting through the birth canal. The brain comes online incrementally as it finishes developing, but generally isn't 100% until the age of 2 or so. This isn't novel or even particularly esoteric. Neurophysiology, development, and cognitive function is related to some work I do and I am kind of expected to be versed in it to some minimum level of competence.
"and i believe that the partial birth abortions are only performed then a mothers life is in danger. so whether or not fetus feels pain does not make a difference. i have a right to choose my life over anyone elses when there is a life threatening situation."
"Personally, I'd like to see these procedures done under short acting general anesthesia, less traumatic to the mom and would put the fetus under also, if it is capable of sensing pain and being distressed by it, highly unlikely but remotely possible."
"increased heart rate, blood flow and hormone levels" are not proof of pain. People have these physiological reactions to many non-painful stimuli. It is a big leap to conclude "pain."
"Fetuses should be anaesthetized.
Look, even if we agree that the fetus ain't a person, I think the same standards should be applied to it that we require for animal research. Pain relief should be delivered if the fetus is capable of feeling pain. End of problem."
And this unbelievable post...
"I've had early ultrasounds with both my children, 11 weeks to be exact.I saw both sucking their thumbs. I've got photos of this to give them someday. Even that early they are little formed humans.
I wouldn't doubt a 20 week fetus can feel pain, I wouldn't doubt a 11 week old fetus feels pain. I wish there were no need for abortions, but it is a woman's choice(at 20 weeks it is most likely to save her life due to toxemia or something similar. I had toxemia late in my pregnancy, fortunately both my baby and myself made it through fine."
I understand that toxemia can be dangerous and lead to preeclampsia, but this mother of two (who agrees a fetus can feel pain) would rather see a woman choose to kill her baby rather than go through the necessary treatment! Let's not inconvenience the mother!!
How can you protect yourself and your baby from the effects of preeclampsia? See your doctor for regular prenatal check-ups throughout your pregnancy. He or she will measure your blood pressure and test your urine for signs of preeclampsia and begin treatment immediately if there is a problem. Early intervention is essential. In mild or early stages, preeclampsia can be controlled.
Treatment includes complete bed rest, a low-salt, high-protein diet and medication. In most cases, once treatment begins, symptoms reverse almost immediately and there is rapid recovery.
http://www.alexian.org/progserv/babies/secondtri/toxemia.html
Subjugated, who is more subjugated than the baby? You probably wouldn't like to be executed for a crime your father committed. It's easy to say yes to abortion when you are not the one being killed.
Women are hurt by abortion, yes including those resulting from rape. Would you like to wake up screaming and crying realizing that you had killed someone in the past? Abortion Hurts Women. Too.
[To supplement your predominate good reasoning on the issue ;) ]
P.S. The rape exception also shreds the pro-life premise that we are talking about another, separate human life. If it is a living child, it can't legitimately be killed. Not even if its father was a rapist. ;)
Settle down, Kimosabe... I know this is a touchy subject, but forcing a woman to bear a child of rape gets a little too close to slavery for my liking.
Actually, most lab animals are given anaesthesia for the same reasons; organisms respond vigorously to the stress of damage, even relatively primitive ones with limited nervous systems, which can be more damaging than the surgical procedure itself. It takes very little brain function to be a responsive organism -- most animals manage it with very primitive brains.
What you will probably find creepy is that animals used in biology labs (of which there are dozens of species, depending on what you are researching) are killed using a method very similar to how a fetus is often killed during an abortion.
Babies in the womb respond to stimuli, they learn - maybe you think they learn no better than rats or reptiles. But people who tear the limbs off rats and lizards to kill them are cruel and evil.
Right, and therein is something of a very questionable inconsistency. People who abhor killing rats but are okay with killing a fetus are completely lacking a useful and consistent morality. I think it is a similar kind of moral weakness/absurdity to those people that love to eat meat but are appalled at the idea of killing an animal, never mind actually killing the animal themselves.
I can deal with a person who has a consistent morality, even if I disagree with them. People with inconsistent moralities fall somewhere between useless and dangerous.
19 weeks, 5 days, 23 hours, 59 minutes?
Etc.
Huh? This doesn't relate to anything I wrote, so I'm not following...
Human fetuses are, of course, human.
This is garbage science.
I agree...Well said.
Age
|
Comment |
Fetal sentience could occur |
Reference
|
4.5 (2.5) |
Development of spinal cord and brain begins |
|
Kuljis (1994) [1] |
6 (4) |
Nerves start to grow, but no connections reported between them |
|
Okado et al (1979) [2] |
7 (5) |
First observed synapses between neurones |
|
Okado et al (1979) [3] |
7 (5) |
First fibres arrive in the cerebral vesicles. Start to form the primordial plexiform layer |
|
Marin-Padilla et al (1982)[4] |
7.5 (5.5) |
Earliest reported fetal movements |
|
|
8.5 (6.5) |
Head, trunk and pelvis move away from a stimulus |
|
De Vries et al (1982)[7] |
9 (7) |
Electrical activity detected in developing brain stem |
|
|
10 (8) |
Development of higher brain begins |
|
Marin-Padilla (1978) [10] |
10 (8) |
Synapse formation within the spine |
|
Okado N (1980) [11] |
10-11 (8-9) |
Isolated fetal breathing movements |
|
De Vries et al (1982) [12] |
10-11 (8-9) |
Initial development of the thalamus |
McCullagh* |
McCullagh [13] |
11 (9) |
Stimulation of hands causes partial finger closure |
|
De Vries et al (1982) [14] |
12.5 (10.5) |
Stimulation of lips elicits reflex swallowing |
|
De Vries et al [15] |
13 (11) |
Sensory receptors on hands, feet and face |
|
Humphrey (1964) [16] |
13 (11) |
Glover believes this is probably the first date at which a fetus can have an awareness of pain |
Glover |
Glover oral submission [17] |
16 (14) |
Episodes of regular fetal breathing movements |
|
De Vries et al (1982) [18] |
20-22 (18-20) |
Nerves connect between cortex and thalamus |
|
Laroche (1981) [19] |
20 (18) |
Electrical activity recorded in the thalamus |
|
Bergstrom (1969) [20] |
22 (20) |
Sensory receptors on all surfaces |
|
Humphrey (1964) [21] |
23 (21) |
Mount hormonal stress response to needle placement for blood transfusions |
|
Giannakoulopoulos [22] |
26 (24) |
Sensory input can reach cortex - therefore pain signals could reach the areas of consciousness |
Fitzgerald |
Report to DoH [23] |
30 (28) |
Myelination complete in pain pathways |
|
Gilles et al (1993) [24] |
Birth or later |
|
Derbyshire |
Derbyshire [25] |
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