From:  The Pro-Life Infonet <infonet@prolifeinfo.org>
Reply-To:  Steven Ertelt <infonet@prolifeinfo.org>
Subject:  George Will:  Science Turning Unborn Into Patients
Source:   New York POst; July 26, 2001

George Will:  Science Turning Unborn Into Patients

[Pro-Life Infonet Note:  George Will is pro-life syndicated columnist and
a widely-published author. He frequently appears on public affairs
television shows.]

The voices of compassion have again been raised in alarm against the Bush
administration. Its offense this time is a desire to increase access that
low-income pregnant women have to prenatal care.  The problem began when
the Department of Health and Human Services sent a letter to state health
officials of the states, notifying them of "a new opportunity to provide
health care coverage to low-income children through the State Children's
Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)." The letter said the administration
would propose that "an unborn child may be considered a 'targeted
low-income child.' "

"Pro-choice" forces are alarmed by this attempt to expand medical choices.
Laurie Rubiner, vice president of the National Partnership for Women and
Families, a pro-abortion lobby, said the administration's "real goal is to
establish a legal precedent for granting personhood to fetuses."

But the real problem for pro-abortion forces is that medical advances are
neither dependent on, nor waiting for, the law to recognize the new facts
that science is creating. The fetus is, in many and multiplying ways, a
patient.

Prenatal medicine is a rapidly expanding facet of today's astonishing
advances in diagnostic and therapeutic capabilities. Obstetricians
increasingly speak of there being two patients in every pregnancy. An
expanding range of acquired distresses or genetic disabilities of "the
patient within" can be treated by a growing array of pharmacological and
surgical measures. For more than 700 pages about this, consult "The Unborn
Patient: The Art and Science of Fetal Therapy," which had its genesis at
the University of California's Fetal Treatment Center in San Francisco.

This summer's argument about embryonic stem-cell research has been,
inevitably, recondite regarding the science involved. But it is directly
related to the more familiar abortion debate because both force decisions
about how to think about life at early stages. And the fundamental fact
about abortion is not at all complex or uncertain. It is that abortion
kills.

How we should describe - which means how we should regard - what abortion
kills is the vexing question that the Supreme Court improvidently thrust
into the center of American politics 28 years ago. But it is an
indisputable scientific fact, not a theological or philosophical opinion
or speculation, that abortion kills something, just as unambiguously as
insecticides kill insects and herbicides kill weeds.

A new inconvenience - an annoyance, probably - for pro-abortion forces is
"volumic sonography," which is three-dimensional ultrasound technology
that provides "a window into the womb." Although this technology is still
evolving, it already provides pictures of living beings that look
remarkably like babies. Imagine that. And this technology, which makes
visible such deformities as spina bifida and cleft lip and palate, will
speed the development of medical interventions for fetuses - patients - in
distress.

It is estimated that at least half the women who currently discover they
are carrying a child with spina bifida - caused by a failure of the spine
to close during development - choose abortion. That choice will become
less compelling and more morally problematic as new technologies make the
reality of the baby more visible, and as new medical techniques make
therapeutic interventions in utero more successful.

Which will please everyone, except, perhaps, pro-abortion forces.





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