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WHY CAN'T WE LOVE THEM BOTH
by Dr. and Mrs. J.C. Willke
CHAPTER 18
WHAT KIND AND HOW?
Spontaneous abortions are usually called miscarriages. Most occur at
home with little danger to the mother. There is sometimes excessive bleeding, however, or
incomplete emptying of the uterus requiring hospitalization, during which the surgeon must
gently tease the rotting remnants of the placenta (afterbirth) from the inside walls of
the womb with a blunt instrument. Even when this procedure (called a D&C) is needed,
there is rarely damage to the mother because the cervix (womb opening) is already softened
and partly opened. Infection is rare. Baby parts are seldom found.
What kind of induced abortions are there?
In the first week there are micro-abortions caused by
"contraceptive" drugs and devices (see Chapters 19 and 35). After implantation
there are those induced by drugs such as RU 486, Methotrexate and prostaglandins (see
Chapter 19).
In the first trimester there are surgical abortions like suction and
D&C.
In the second and third trimesters there are instillation types,
D&E, intracardiac injections and partial birth abortions.
What are the
first trimester surgical ones?
There are several types:
- Menstrual extraction:
This is a very early suction abortion, often done before the
pregnancy test is positive.
- Suction-aspiration:
In this method, the abortionist must first paralyze the cervical
muscle ring (womb opening) and then stretch it open. This is difficult because it is hard
or "green" and not ready to open. He then inserts a hollow plastic tube, which
has a knife-like edge on the tip, into the uterus. The suction tears the babys body
into pieces. He then cuts the deeply rooted placenta from the inner wall of the uterus.
The scraps are sucked out into a bottle (see color photo in back of book). The suction is
29 times more powerful than a home vacuum cleaner.
- Dilatation
& Curettage (D&C):
This is similar to the suction procedure except that the abortionist
inserts a curette, a loop-shaped steel knife, up into the uterus. With this, he cuts the
placenta and baby into pieces and scrapes them out into a basin. Bleeding is usually
profuse.
What are second trimester
ones?
In the 1970s and 80s the most common type was saline amniocentesis, or salt poisoning abortions.
These are not used much anymore because of danger to the mother.
These are done after the 16th week. A large needle is inserted through the abdominal wall
of the mother and into the babys amniotic sac. A concentrated salt solution is
injected into the amniotic fluid. The baby breathes and swallows it, is poisoned,
struggles, and sometimes convulses. It takes over an hour to kill the baby. When
successful, the mother goes into labor about one day later and delivers a dead baby.
Is it actually poisoning?
Yes. The mechanism of death is acute hypernatremia
or acute salt poisoning, with development of wide-spread vasodilatation, edema,
congestion, hemorrhage, shock, and death. Galen et al.,
"Fetal Pathology and Mechanism of Death in Saline Abortion, Amer. Jour. of
OB&GYN,1974, vol. 120, pp. 347-355
And other methods?
In the 70s and 80s, prostaglandin
drugs were used to induce violent premature labor and delivery. When used alone, there
was: "...a large complication rate (42.6%) is associated with its use. Few risks in
obstetrics are more certain than that which occurs to a
pregnant woman undergoing abortion after the 14th week of pregnancy." Duenhoelter & Grant, "Complications Following Prostaglandin
F-2 Alpha Induced Mid-trimester Abortion." Jour. of OB & GYN, Sept. 1975
Because of these problems, the D&E or Dilatation & Evacuation
method was developed and largely replaced the above. It involves the live dismemberment of
the baby and piecemeal removal from below.
A pliers-like instrument is used because the babys bones are
calcified, as is the skull. There is no anesthetic for the baby. The abortionist inserts
the instrument up into the uterus, seizes a leg or other part of the body, and, with a
twisting motion, tears it from the babys body. This is repeated again and again. The
spine must be snapped, and the skull crushed to remove them. The nurses job is to
reassemble the body parts to be sure that all are removed.
This sounds dangerous.
It is, but a report from the U.S. Center for Disease Control, Dept.
HEW, stated that it is still safer for the mother than the salt-poisoning or Prostaglandin
method. "Comparative
Risks of Three Methods of Midtrimester Abortion," Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report, Center for Disease Control, HEW, Nov. 26, 1976
It is reported that every year about 100,000 women
are aborted by the D&E method, between 13 and 24 weeks gestation. Of this, 500 have
"serious complications." This was still judged to have a "lower risk of
morbidity and mortality than the infusion procedures." MacKay et al., "Safety of Local vs General Anesthesia for Second Trimester D&E Abortions" OB-GYN, vol.
66, no. 5, Nov.1985, p. 661
Any new methods?
Yes, intracardiac injections.
Since the advent of fertility drugs, multi-fetal pregnancies have become common. "The
frequency of triplet and higher pregnancies . . . has increased 200% since the early
1970s."
Since these are usually born prematurely and some
have other problems, a new method has been developed. Assisted
Repro. Techniques . . . , L. Wilcox, Fertl. & Sterility, vol. 65, #2, Feb.
96, pg. 361
At about 4 months a needle is inserted through the mothers
abdomen, into the chest and heart of one of the fetal babies and a poison injected to kill
him or her. This is "pregnancy reduction." It is done to reduce the number or to
kill a handicapped baby, if such is identified. If successful, the dead babys body
is absorbed.
Sometimes, however, this method results in the loss of all of the
babies.
Are there 3rd trimester abortions?
A more recently developed method here is the partial birth abortion, also called "brain
suction" or "D&X" methods.
- These are done after 4 or 5 months.
- 80% of babies are normal.
- Most babies are viable.
This is like a breech delivery. The entire infant is delivered
except the head. A scissors is jammed into the base of the skull. A tube is inserted into
the skull, and the brain is sucked out. The now-dead infant is pulled out. The drawings
illustrate this.



Perhaps its her only choice.
"There are no medical circumstances in which a
partial-birth abortion is the only safe alternative. We take care of pregnant women who
are very sick, and babies who are very sick, and we never perform partial-birth abortions.
. . . There are plenty of alternatives. . . . This is clearly a procedure no obstetrician
needs to do." F. Boehm, Dr. OB, Vanderbilt U. Med.
The Washington Times, May 6, 1966, p. A1
But isnt it the
safest?
To do this was called a "version & breech
delivery." This was abandoned decades ago as it was too dangerous. Instead today the
much safer Cesarean Section is used. Dr. Warren Hern, author of the late term
abortion medical text said, "I would dispute any statement that this is the safest
procedure to use. The procedure can cause amniotic fluid embolism or placental
abruption." AMA News, Nov. 20, 1995, p. 3
Dr. Pamela Smith, Director of Medical Education, Dept. of Ob-Gyn at
Mt. Sinai Hospital in Chicago, has stated: "There are absolutely no obstetrical
situations encountered in this country which would require partial- birth abortion to
preserve the life or health of the mother." And she adds two more risks: cervical
incompetence in subsequent pregnancies caused by three days of forceful dilation of the
cervix, and uterine rupture caused by rotating the fetus in the womb. Joseph DeCook,
Fellow, Am. Col., Ob/Gyn, founder of PHACT (Physicians Ad Hoc Coalition for Truth),
stated: "There is no literature that testifies to the safety of partial birth
abortions. Its a maverick procedure devised by maverick doctors who wish to deliver
a dead fetus. Such abortions could lead to infection causing sterility." Also,
"Drawing out the baby in breech position is a very dangerous procedure and could tear
the uterus. Such a ruptured uterus could cause the mother to bleed to death in ten
minutes.".."The puncturing of the childs skull produces bone shards that
could puncture the uterus." (Congressman Charles Canady (R-FL), 7/23).
But why kill the infant?
Youve said it! Obviously the mother wants to get unpregnant.
Even if this is accepted, we must still ask, why kill? Most of these babies are viable.
They are only 3 or 4 inches (10 cm) from delivery. One gentle pull and the head will come
out. Then the cord could be cut, and the infant given to the nurse to take to the
intensive care nursery.
There is absolutely no medical reason to kill the baby except that
the mother wants him dead.
Are there videos?
Two excellent videos are "The Procedure" by Don Donahey on
partial birth abortion and "Eclipse of Reason" by B. Nathanson, both obtainable
through a Right to Life Office.
What about toxemia, serious diabetes, etc., in late pregnancy?
In these cases the pregnancy may have to be terminated to save the
mothers life. But left alone, both might die. Treatment here is not abortion but
premature delivery. This attempts to save both lives.
Is surgery
on an ectopic pregnancy an abortion?
Some do define this as an abortion, and this is one reason why Right
to Life people usually accept a "life of the mother" exception to laws that
would forbid abortion.
By the time most ectopic surgery is done, the developing baby is
dead and often destroyed by the hemorrhage. In any case, such surgery is done primarily to
prevent the death of the mother. This is good medical practice because there is no chance
for the baby to survive. Even if a yet-alive, tiny baby were removed from the tube, the
Right to Life movement would allow this, for without the procedure, both would die. The
baby has a zero chance of survival. The surgery will save the mothers life. If
medical technology were advanced enough to allow transplanting the baby from its
pathological location, and placing it into the uterus, then most ethicists would say this
should be done. Since this is not possible with present technology, the tiny new
babys life today is lost.
How about removal or treatment of a cancerous or of a traumatized
pregnant uterus, or of some other organ while the mother is pregnant?
The same applies. Surgery is done or treatment is given to prevent
the death of the mother. The death of the baby, if it occurs, would be an unfortunate and
undesired secondary effect. If at all possible, the baby should also be saved.

This was the result of one mornings work in a Canadian
teaching hospital. These babies had attained fetal ages of 18-24 weeks (4-5 months) before
being killed by abortion.
"In times past, abortion took the life of one,
for other-wise two would die. Today, abortion takes the life of one, where otherwise two would live." H.
Ratner, M.D.
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