Bangok Post Saturday February 11, 2006
HEALTH
Women with severe mental illnesses
or carrying babies with incurable genetic disorders will be able
to have a legal abortion under a new regulation issued by the Medical
Council. Council secretary-general Somsak Lohleka said yesterday
that the regulation has been in place for a month. He was speaking
at a seminar on abortion co-organised by the Thai Health Promotion
Foundation and Mahidol University.
The regulation was not meant to make abortion easy, he said.
The council has set up strict criteria to help it decide on a case-by-case
basis whether women with serious mental illnesses should be allowed
to have an abortion.
Dr Somsak said psychiatrists' recommendations were required in the
process and doctors must inform the council every time they are
to perform an abortion on a patient.
In the past, abortions were allowed if the pregnancies were caused
by rape, or if they were considered dangerous to the mother's health.
However, Nattaya Boonphakdee, coordinator of a women's health promotion
foundation, said that although the law allowed women who have been
raped to have an abortion, doctors were generally reluctant to perform
the procedure.
Doctors often waited until the women lodged complaints with the
police and the courts passed a verdict on the rape case, she said.
Meanwhile, Kritaya Achvanijkul, director of the Mahidol Institute
for Population and Social Research, said the abandonment of babies
is currently a serious social concern.
Last year, according to Mahidol University's Child Watch project,
there were nearly 800 abandoned babies, or an average of two babies
abandoned every day.
Unwanted pregnancies, abortion, and abandoned babies represent a
serious national problem., said Ms Kritaya.
Women who opt for abortions, legal or not, are mostly in the 20-29
age bracket, she said.
Social work advocate Walaiphorn Worasuk suggested the Social Development
and Human Security Ministry amend the law to allow women with unwanted
pregnancies to decide whether to ask the government to find suitable
families to adopt their babies.
The age of the women who could make such decisions should be raised
from 18 to 20 years old, to ensure they have sounder judgement,
and consent from parents should also be required, she said |