Abortion Information
Technology
Assists Women with High Risk Pregnancies
by Laura Kamin
Laura
Kamin is a 1993 graduate of Wisconsin Lutheran College, with
a bachelor's degree in English. She is an education assistant
at Wisconsin Right to Life.
These words strike fear into the
hearts of pregnant women with these conditions. How extensive is
the cancer? What will the diabetes do to my baby? Will my health
or my baby's health be jeopardized? Will I live or die? Will my
baby live or die?
Abortion advocates play on
emotions in these situations to press the "need" for
abortion. They argue that protection of the woman's
"health" takes precedence over the life of her unborn
baby. She can always have other children later, they reason, and
she must think of the effect this illness will have on the rest
of the family.
A distinction must be made between
pregnancies which could endanger the health of the mother,
such as hypertension, diabetes, epilepsy, or cancer, and those
which endanger the life of the mother, such as uterine
cancer.
The Handbook of Obstetrics and
Gynecology defines a high-risk pregnancy as "one that
imposes a definite or probable increased hazard to the life or
health of the mother or offspring. The risk may be due to
maternal or fetal problems or to treatment of these
problems."1 These identified medical conditions
affecting pregnancy may have mandated ending the pregnancy at one
time in history. However, with current medical care, technology,
and prenatal care, these conditions are now manageable.
High-risk pregnancies are most
commonly associated with, but not limited to:
1. Pregnancy-induced
hypertension [high blood pressure], which complicates
"about 5 to 7 percent of pregnancies in otherwise normal
women .... The major maternal hazard is that of eclampsia or
gran mal seizures, resulting from profound cerebral effects
of the disease."2
With regard to high blood pressure
during pregnancy, Scott and Worley write in their chapter on
"Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy" that, "With
proper management PIH [pregnancy-induced hypertension] can often
be ameliorated and eclampsia [seizures] largely, if not entirely,
prevented."7 These conditions generally only
occur in the third trimester of pregnancy. As current medical
knowledge and technology improve, rarely must a pregnancy be
ended to save the mother's life.
2. Diabetes, which
affects an estimated 2 to 5 percent of all pregnancies in the
U.S.3
Of diabetes, Benson writes that
"...maternal death is rare with modern treatment..."8
William Spellacy writes that, "Today, by using [the
information that is available], women with diabetes mellitus can
expect normal pregnancy outcomes."9
3. Epilepsy, which
complicates approximately 0. 15 percent of pregnancies.4
Danforth's Obstetrics and
Gynecology states, regarding epilepsy, that, "Status
epilepticus in pregnancy ... is fortunately uncommon, occurring
in less than 1 percent of epileptic pregnancies. It is not an
indication for pregnancy termination..."10 Benson
writes in Handbook of Obstetrics and Gynecology that
"therapeutic abortion is not medically indicated for
epilepsy, because this disorder may or may not constitute a
problem during pregnancy." 11
4. Cancer, whose
occurrence in pregnancy, according to a report in the Archives
of Internal Medicine, is "between 0.07 and 0.1
percent." The Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
study by Saunders and Baum states that breast cancer is
the "second commonest malignancy seen during pregnancy
(cervical being commonest) - occurring in between 10 and 39
per 100,000 pregnancies."6
Regarding treatment of cancer
during pregnancy, "Significant advances have been made with
current chemotherapeutic agents in increasing longevity
and improving survival. Cures and long-term remissions are
obtained in diseases that previously were untreatable."12
The Archives of Internal Medicine report goes on to
say that, while there is increased risk of spontaneous abortion
and major birth defects when chemotherapy is used during the
first trimester, "such a risk is not apparent beyond the
first trimester."13
Cancer of the uterus during
pregnancy poses the greatest threat to the life of the mother;
removal of the uterus is usually recommended. In these cases the
baby dies as an indirect result of procedures performed to save
the mother's life.
Breast cancer presents special
difficulties, but early diagnosis is again the key according to
Drs. William Creasman and Philip Di Saia, oncologists writing in
a 1993 publication, Clinical Gynecologic Oncology. "The
best evidence indicates that pregnancy does not augment the rate
of growth or distant spread of breast cancer and that abortion
for women with breast cancer does not improve the
prognosis...Therapeutic abortion has not been found to increase
survival, and the presence of a fetus does not compromise proper
therapy in early stages."14 They go on to note
that other reports agree that termination of pregnancy has no
effect on patient survival.15 A study in the Journal
of the Royal Society of Medicine reports that "it
appears that subsequent pregnancies after treatment for breast
cancer may actually improve the patient's chance of long-term
survival."16
You can read the true story of
Joyce Maguire, an expectant mother diagnosed with breast cancer.
"Termination of the pregnancy" was mentioned by the
physician, but the couple never considered it.
1. Benson, Ralph C., M.D., Handbook
of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Lange Medical
Publications, Los Altos, CA; 1983, p.99.
2. Danforth, David, Danforth's Obstetrics and Gynecology, 6th
edition, J.B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia, PA; 1990, p.411.
3. Knuppel et al., Hospital Medicine, "The Pregnant
Patient with Medical Disease," Vol.23, No.3, March 1987.
4. Danforth, P. 126.
5. Archives of Internal Medicine, March 1992, Vol. 152,
p.573.
6. Saunders and Baum, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine,
Vol. 86, March 1993, p. 162.
7. Danforth, p.411.
8. Benson, p.365.
9. Danforth, p.403.
10. Danforth, pp, 514-515.
11. Benson, p.360.
12. Zemlickis et al., Archives of Internal Medicine, March
1992, Vol. 152, p.573.
13. lbid, p.576.
14. Creasman, William T., M.D. and Philip J. DiSaia, M.D.,
Clinical Gynecologic Oncology, Mosby-Year Book, Inc., St.
Louis, MO; 1993, p.567-570.
15. Ibid.
16. Saunders and Baum, Journal of the Royal Society of
Medicine, March 1993, Vol. 86, p. 162.
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