РефератыИностранный языкAbAbortion Essay Research Paper An abortion is

Abortion Essay Research Paper An abortion is

Abortion Essay, Research Paper


An abortion is a woman’s option to terminate a pregnancy. It is an induced


miscarriage. Abortion has become an extremely controversial topic in the past 3 decades


since it has been legalized. There has been extreme violence stemming from this issue


that we as a country need to put under control, regardless of our personal stances on the


issue.


There are many reasons why a woman would choose to have an abortion. She


does not feel she is ready to be a parent, she can not afford a baby, and being too young


or immature to be responsible for another life are only three of these reasons. If a woman


becomes pregnant due to a rape or from incest would be another reason. It has been


found that almost fifty per cent of all women will have an abortion by the time they reach


45. Is this number increasing since the legalization of abortion? Probably not,


considering the fact that before abortions were legal they were still being preformed. The


only difference is now they are safer.


Before 1965, abortion was somewhat taboo. No one dared to even discuss the


issue. Abortion was frowned upon and considered “evil”; therefore it remained a very


private issue. Abortions were performed by doctors, nurses, midwives, even


chiropractors. Being that abortions were not performed in a hospital or clinic, anyone


who felt like it could become an abortionist. These abortions were referred to as back-


alley abortions. They were unsafe and lead to the deaths of many women, but in 1933 it


was estimated that nearly 2 million were performed (Grisey). This proves to us that


regardless if abortion is legal or not, if a woman feels she needs to have one she is going


to. The prices of these abortions ranged from about $83 for white women to about $45


for women in prision or African American women.


There are currently two types of abortions, medical abortions and surgical


abortions. A medical abortion is done without surgery. There are two steps to this


abortion. First the woman is either given an injection of a drug called methotrexate or a


tablet called mifepristone. These drugs stop the pregnancy. Next the woman is given


Misoprostol, which may be recieved in either pill or suppository form. This causes the


uterus to contract and empty, which expels the fetus from the woman’s body. This type


of abortion can cost the woman anywhere from $200 to $350.


The second type of abortion is a surgical abortion. There are three commonly


used methods of surgical abortion: manual vacuum aspiration, dilation and suction


cutterage, or dilation and evacuation. The method used depends upon the length of the


pregnancy. The manual vacuum aspiration empties the uterus with the gentle suction of


a manual syringe. This type of abortion can be used up to ten weeks from the woman’ s


last period.


The second method of surgical abortion is the dilation and suction cutterage


method. During this procedure the uterus is emptied with a machine-operated suction. A


narrow metal loop also known as a curette may be used to clean the walls of the uterus.


This method of abortion can be from six to fourteen weeks after the woman’s last period.


Both of these procedures take about 10 minutes to complete.


The last method of surgical abortion is the dilation and evacuation. During this


procedure the womens cervix is slowly dilated with a series of tubes, that increase in size,


the biggest being about the size of a ball point pen. Next the uterus is emptied using a


suction machine and various medical instruments including a curette. This method of


abortion is used up to 24 weeks since the woman’s last period. Abortions are rarely


performed anytime after 24 weeks. They will only be performed if there are serious


health risks to the mother. Any of these abortion methods will cost approximately $450.


During or after an abortion most women will experience cramping, somewhat


similar to menstrual cramps. Some women experience no pain at all and some


experience a more severe pain. After an abortion a woman should relax for the rest of


the day, but she can return to normal activities, excluding sexual intercourse, the next


day.


There is a wide spectrum of opinions regarding abortion. There are those people


who are willing to murder doctors and women at an abortion clinic. There are those who


feel that a person should have the right to choose if they want to have one. Then there


are those who believe it is a violation of our freedom to make abortions illegal.


The Catholic Church has taken a strong stance against abortion. In the 14th


century a Dominican moralist and Archbishop of Florence, Antoninus, condemed


anyone who would attempt or have anything to do with an abortion. He claimed they


were guilty of sin, regardless if the abortion was successful or not. Antoninus does,


however, write that abortion is okay if it is necessary to save the mother’s life.


The Second Vatican Council refers to abortion as an “unspeakable crime”. The


Pope defined abortion as “the deliberate killing by whatever means it is carried out, of a


human being in the intial phase of his or her existence, extending from conception to


birth”. It is written in the “Declaration on Procured Abortion” that “from the time that the


ovum is fertilized, a life has begun which is neither that of the father or mother; it is


rather the life of a new human being with it’s own growth. It would never be made


human if it were not human already. (Farminton Fellowship Study)


The Church’s stance is that from the time an egg is fertilized by a sperm, there is a


human life, which can not be taken by anyone. The Church argues that just as a person


may not kill another on the street, a person may not kill an innocent fetus. To look


through the Church’s eyes on the issue of abortion is to see it as a violation of the first


commandment, “thou shalt not kill”.


One of the most difficult abortion related issues faced by our country’s lawmakers


are parental consent laws. Some states are now requiring that a teenager must tell at least


one of their parents, in some states both, if they plan to have an abortion. It has been


found, in a 1991 study, that sixty one per cent of all teenagers who choose abortion do


discuss it with a parent. However those who do not discuss it with their parent don’t for


obvious reasons: they feel they will dissappoint their parents, they fear violence, or being


forced to leave home.


In the states where there are currently parental consent laws, teens who feel they


cann not tell their parents have two options. They must travel to a state where they can


obtain a legal abortion without parental consent or they must obtain a judicial bypass.


Both of these choices make it much harder for the teen to obtain an abortion and also


take valuable time. To prevent the teens from leaving the state to get an abortion some


states reintroduced the Child Custody Protection Act into the House and the Senate. The


bill was passed, but President Clinton threatened to veto it and it was never taken back


into consideration. If passed this would subject any one, other than a parent, who helped


a teen cross state lines to obtain an abortion, to criminal prosecution.


I feel that whether or not a woman chooses to have an abortion is her own choice.


Currently we do not force women who want to keep a child to abort it, so why should we


force a woman who does not want to keep her unborn baby to keep it? To outlaw


abortions kills women. When alcohol was outlawed by nineteenth amendment, people


did not stop drinking. Bootleggers made or imported alcohol and sold it on the black


market. The same will happen with abortion if it is outlawed, it will be driven back into


the back- alleys, back to abortions being performed with coathangers.


In Medicine and Christian Morality O’Donnel argues that in this country there are


certain “truths that we hold to be self evident” that being the fact that “all men are created


equal”. But how can a fetus be granted rights if it imposes upon the rights of the mother


who bears it? It can not be granted these rights. A fetus is not a thinking, reasoning


human being, a woman is, so there is no way a fetus’ rights be more important than the


mothers.


Personally I feel that by forcing a mother to have a child that she does not want


will lead to an increase in child abuse and neglect. I am not encouraging the use of


abortion as a method of birth control, but accidents will happen. Some people are


responsible enough to deal with these accidents, but some feel that they are not ready to


bring a child into this world. If a mother feels she can not properly care for a child, isn’t


it better for the fetus to be aborted before it is brought into a world where it can not be


properly loved, cared for and supported?


1. Grady, John L, Abortion Yes or No. (no printing press). Florida,1972.


2. Grisey, Germain, Abortion: the Myths, the Realities and the Argument.Corpus Books,


New York,1970.


3. O’Donnell, Thomas J, Medicine and Christian Morality. Alba House, New York, 1976


4. www.plannedparenthood.org/abortion.html


5. www.religioustolerance.org/abortion.htm

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