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New Proposal: Contraception = Abortion?
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Arellia
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PostMon Jul 21, 2008 4:08 pm    New Proposal: Contraception = Abortion?

Quote:
The Bush administration wants to require all recipients of aid under federal health programs to certify that they will not refuse to hire nurses and other providers who object to abortion and even certain types of birth control.

The proposal defines abortion as follows: �any of the various procedures � including the prescription, dispensing and administration of any drug or the performance of any procedure or any other action � that results in the termination of the life of a human being in utero between conception and natural birth, whether before or after implantation.�

Mary Jane Gallagher, president of the National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association, which represents providers, said, �The proposed definition of abortion is so broad that it would cover many types of birth control, including oral contraceptives and emergency contraception.�


- http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/15/washington/15rule.html?_r=3&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&ref=us&adxnnlx=1216674145-yRr7b8J8AL3h5Jj8c5PoHQ


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Lord Borg
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PostFri Jul 25, 2008 3:32 pm    

This kind of worries me, because I can see this being abused, mistreated whatever you want to say, if not the original intentions behind this to already prevent certain...options from being available, or used. Sad, really.


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Birdy
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PostTue Jul 29, 2008 8:34 am    

This is shocking. So even things that prohibit a conception are considered abortion, if I understand correctly? Wow.
And Bush wants to push this through just before he leaves, of course.
I think it's just ridiculous. I though America was a country to be free, to do what you want? It certainly won't be anymore if this implemented.



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Arellia
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PostTue Jul 29, 2008 11:02 am    

^ Agreed. The most worrisome thing is that if the definition remains that abortion includes contraception, if McCain wins and picks people on the supreme court who will ban abortion, it might intentionally or unintentionally include birth control. I realize that *seems* like a stretch, but I have a problem when the government starts playing with the definition of abortion like this.

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calvin
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PostWed Aug 20, 2008 9:33 pm    

there's already a "conscience clause" passed in several states which allows pharmacists to refuse to fill a customer's prescription for emergency contraceptives like Plan B (commonly referred to as the "morning-after pill"). this type of religiously-motivated legislation has started us down a slippery-slope.

a few years ago i even read about a woman who was raped and went to the police for help. when she expressed desire to take the morning-after pill to prevent pregnancy a priest advised the police to hold her at the police station, and essentially put her in jail for being raped. they eventually released her, but by then the window of opportunity for maximum effectiveness of emergency contraceptives had already passed. and i'm pretty sure this happened in a southern state where abortion is illegal. so, yea... it was really *beep* up.

not to mention the Bush administration has also cut funding from U.N. agencies and international aid organizations which provide contraceptives or family planning services & education to developing nations. their policy of stamping out family planning and promoting abstinence-only programs has already had a hugely detrimental effect on public health (particularly of women) in 3rd world countries.


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Arellia
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PostWed Aug 20, 2008 11:15 pm    

The family planning overseas thing is very sad... along with the woman rape story. Though, I would note, no state can currently ban abortion, they can only restrict (requiring parental consent, consent of the father, counseling, mandatory wait times not to exceed 24 hours, etc.). I understand that religious people in medicine have their views, but to be honest, if you're an OB-GYN who refuses to offer contraceptives or information on abortions, you need a new profession. I've had OB's tell me that if contraception fails I "cannot" have an abortion because "the baby has to live." That's really not the place of a medical professional.

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Lord Borg
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 1:31 am    

Arellia wrote:
The family planning overseas thing is very sad... along with the woman rape story. Though, I would note, no state can currently ban abortion, they can only restrict (requiring parental consent, consent of the father, counseling, mandatory wait times not to exceed 24 hours, etc.). I understand that religious people in medicine have their views, but to be honest, if you're an OB-GYN who refuses to offer contraceptives or information on abortions, you need a new profession. I've had OB's tell me that if contraception fails I "cannot" have an abortion because "the baby has to live." That's really not the place of a medical professional.


I can agree with you, 100% here as I have the same feelings, whatever stance you can have on the subject is your choice, and its a right you have, particularly in this country. However to deny options over your beliefs is wrong on so many levels. Of course, those that agree with what someone could do then would probably give what ever reasons why this can be right, say that itis a choice, they can do this and that, they can protest blah blah blah. I really don't care either way, except that like you said, if your an OB-GYN, then you have a job to do. DO IT. If your...beliefs contradict with what your job requires, then like you said, its time for another career.



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PrankishSmart
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 5:46 am    

calvin wrote:
there's already a "conscience clause" passed in several states which allows pharmacists to refuse to fill a customer's prescription for emergency contraceptives like Plan B (commonly referred to as the "morning-after pill"). this type of religiously-motivated legislation has started us down a slippery-slope.

a few years ago i even read about a woman who was raped and went to the police for help. when she expressed desire to take the morning-after pill to prevent pregnancy a priest advised the police to hold her at the police station, and essentially put her in jail for being raped. they eventually released her, but by then the window of opportunity for maximum effectiveness of emergency contraceptives had already passed. and i'm pretty sure this happened in a southern state where abortion is illegal. so, yea... it was really *beep* up.

not to mention the Bush administration has also cut funding from U.N. agencies and international aid organizations which provide contraceptives or family planning services & education to developing nations. their policy of stamping out family planning and promoting abstinence-only programs has already had a hugely detrimental effect on public health (particularly of women) in 3rd world countries.


And America wonders why the rest of the world does not like them.


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squiggy
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 5:28 pm    

I am rather disturbed by this...
While I understand the Hipocratic oath requires them to "Do no harm", I can think of more than a few doctors who haven't taken this into consideration. ((I personally have been victimized by a few of them, as have a few people I've known...))
however, this, to me, is unconstitutional.
How can SOMEONE ELSE'S BELIEFS say what medication I am not allowed to take? How can SOMEONE ELSE'S BELIEFS say what surgeries I can and can not have?
What about my beliefs? What about my rights?
And this isn't strictly an American issue. In some Canadian Provinces, there is a likewise Labor board clause that states that no medical doctor, or pharmacist has to do any procedure, or prescribe/fill any prescription that they have a religious problem with.
((I actually had to travel to Quebec to get one of the surgeries for my leg, because the surgery stipulated a blood transfusion, which I needed, because of my anemia, however, as the procedure normally did not require a blood transfusion, the only doctor capable of the surgery without a long wait time refused to do it, because he was a Jehovah's Witness.))
So I had to wonder... can a Mormon pharmacist refuse to dispatch psychotropic drugs, pain killers such as Morphine, or Vicodin, or other such drugs that alter a person's mental state? Can they refuse to dispatch drugs which help treat mental illnesses?
Can a Jehovah's Witness doctor refuse to recommend any procedure that requires blood transfusions?
A rather disturbing answer has fallen to my ears. One that has me wondering exactly what my rights are, as their' patient.
Yes. They can. And frequently do.
((I've had to change nine different pharmacies over the past two years for exactly this reason.... and three different doctors, for similar reasons.))
So the question that I brought up with my local MP/MLA{Member of Parliament, or the Canadian equivelant to the US Congress/Member of the Legislative Assembly, or the Canadian equivelant to a US State governing body.} which was rather bluntly and simply worded, was where do these people step off? If they are unable, for religious reasons, to prescribe, or do a procedure, or drug, which may SAVE MY LIFE, or MAKE IT BETTER, by what right do they have the right to say no?
My response, from both members was worded, almost exactly the same. Translated from Bureaucratese to common English, essentially:
Because a Medical Doctor and Pharmacist have the same freedom to religion that the general public has, they may use whatever ethics they deem right, in the treatment of the patient.
So the question then comes to my mind, which I haven't been able to translate into bureaucretese just yet, is this:
So if my doctor is a Satanic worshiper, is it legal for them to 'assist my suicide'?
((By the way, if someone actually does find a way to put that into bureaucratese, send it to me, so I can send it to the local MLA, and see what kind of response it garners.))


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Arellia
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 5:56 pm    

Um... Satanists would honor your wishes if you wanted a suicide... me being friends with a Satanist I have to wonder why and how you mean to target them. They don't go around killing people. In fact, they're pretty hyper about respect.

On the issue of harming a patient directly because of your ideals, that is an excellent point--if a religion required, say, that the woman die to save a fetus, that seems to be at conflict. Many religious people I know feel that way.


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squiggy
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 6:03 pm    

You get my meaning, at least, if not the exact syntax I phrased certain parts of it. Indeed, I also have friends who are satanists, and I didn't intentionally single them out, it's just that it's the first one that came to mind.
However, I also agree with the woman dying to save a fetus. What if the fetus then dies somewhere down the line? Who has to apolagize to the family of the woman who died because they made a bad choice?
And what if that woman also was the mother of two other children? Or a researcher studying a cure for cancer? Or a street person? Would there be a double standard? Would the first two be allowed to get abortions, while the third would not? Who would ultimately be able to make that choice? And by what right would they have to make it?
Because of their' belief system? What about the rights and beliefs of those three patients?


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Lord Borg
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 10:36 pm    

What bothers me, is how this is a law that allows some rights to be violated, I spoke to my father about this (I don't think he quite caught the drift behind the true intentions of this...whatever), is how medical professionals are allowed to take a job like this, and then use their position to fight what they perceive as wrong. Not all of us live under the belief that sex is only for reproduction with your spouse, anyways to my point, how is it that this will allow them to deny treatment with no legal ramifications (Particularly if it included death, or ill heath as a result), yet if a parent/legal guardian/whatever were to make a decision on religious belief, depending on how the outcome of it was (Such as death), legal charges could potentially (and most likely would) be brought forth against said individual?

Personally, I think...well, I really don't know what I truly think, or how to say it if I do.



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calvin
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 11:02 pm    

Arellia wrote:
The family planning overseas thing is very sad... along with the woman rape story. Though, I would note, no state can currently ban abortion, they can only restrict (requiring parental consent, consent of the father, counseling, mandatory wait times not to exceed 24 hours, etc.). I understand that religious people in medicine have their views, but to be honest, if you're an OB-GYN who refuses to offer contraceptives or information on abortions, you need a new profession. I've had OB's tell me that if contraception fails I "cannot" have an abortion because "the baby has to live." That's really not the place of a medical professional.

ah, you're absolutely right. i guess i thought the roe v. wade decision was only protection against a federal ban on abortions and that the states might have contradicting laws (sorta like how medical marijuana is legal in California, but illegal at the federal level), but that's clearly not the case.

however, depending on the community and the local cultural climate, it still might not be possible for women in certain parts of the country to get an abortion, legal status notwithstanding. after all, cultural hegemony has a very profound influence on the practical realities of any given society.

regarding the conscience clause, imagine how problematic it would be if school teachers could refuse to teach certain parts of the state education curriculum based on religious objections. for instance, omit the spanish inquisition and the crusades when teaching european history. or omitting the theory of evolution in biology class. i mean, do jewish waiters refuse to serve dishes that their customer has ordered if they're unkosher? certain professional guidelines have to be followed regardless of one's religious beliefs.

individuals should have freedom from religion, not of religion--which implies that theists have additional rights which non-theists do not.


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Lord Borg
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 11:16 pm    

Isn't it already illegal to teach evolution, or is that something else I am thinking of? Sorry to go off topic, here...


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calvin
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PostThu Aug 21, 2008 11:53 pm    

to quote the wikipedia page on the Kansas State Board of Education:
Quote:
In 1999, the Board ruled that instruction about evolution, the age of the earth, and the origin of the universe was permitted, but not mandatory, and that those topics would not appear on state standardized tests. However, the Board reversed this decision February 14, 2001, ruling that instruction of all those topics was mandatory and that they would appear on standardized tests.

Then on August 9, 2005, the Board approved a draft of science curriculum standards that mandated equal time for the theories of "evolution" and "intelligent design". But February 13, 2007, the Board voted 6 to 4 to reject the amended science standards enacted in 2005. The definition of science was once again limited to "the search for natural explanations for what is observed in the universe", [1] or what is known as "methodological naturalism".

a most ignominious page in our nation's history, much like the Scopes Monkey Trial.


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squiggy
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PostFri Aug 22, 2008 12:16 am    

calvin wrote:
to quote the wikipedia page on the Kansas State Board of Education:
Quote:
In 1999, the Board ruled that instruction about evolution, the age of the earth, and the origin of the universe was permitted, but not mandatory, and that those topics would not appear on state standardized tests. However, the Board reversed this decision February 14, 2001, ruling that instruction of all those topics was mandatory and that they would appear on standardized tests.

Then on August 9, 2005, the Board approved a draft of science curriculum standards that mandated equal time for the theories of "evolution" and "intelligent design". But February 13, 2007, the Board voted 6 to 4 to reject the amended science standards enacted in 2005. The definition of science was once again limited to "the search for natural explanations for what is observed in the universe", [1] or what is known as "methodological naturalism".

a most ignominious page in our nation's history, much like the Scopes Monkey Trial.

Amusingly enough, in 7 provinces in Canada, a teacher can still refuse to teach the theory of evolution, and cannot be discounted for a teaching job because of such refusal, as that is a violation of the teacher's religious rights.
However, in Quebec, Ontario, and British Columbia, the labor boards have stipulated that a teacher can be discounted for teaching SUBJECTS RELATING TO the theory of evolution, if it violates their' religious right to teach it, as it is a mandatory part of the Canadian Education system. Which prompted several Social Sciences teachers to move to teaching something else.
It really is an interesting world we live in, when a teacher can decide not to teach you something you believe in, because they don't, a doctor can decide not to do a procedure on you, because it requires a blood transfusion that you have no problem with, but they do, and a pharmacist can deny you access to birth control medication because 'abortion is murder'. Next thing you know we'll be told that we can't vote in an election because our' opinion on a subject like... say... this exact subject, where another person's religious rights over-ride ours', because the government doesn't want you spreading your' "Racist propaganda" around through politicians who believe likewise.
((Although I've often wondered...))


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