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Weekly Worker 563 Thursday February 10 2005
Science and social choices
The threat to abortion rights in Britain appears to have least temporarily
abated. Despite rumours to the contrary, the December private members
ballot in the House of Commons did not produce any bill aimed at cutting
the time limit for late-term abortion. It has also become clear that the
government does not plan to introduce any changes in the run-up to the
election.
But we should not be fooled into thinking that the struggle is over. It
is especially important to continue the arguments in the face of campaigning
by the rightwing press. The Pro-Choice Forum, a campaign largely run by
Ellie Lee, lecturer in social policy at the University of Kent, has recently
compiled a briefing - Late abortion: a review of the evidence (see www.proch-oiceforum.org.uk).
The aim is to help reasoned conclusions to be drawn in this difficult
and challenging debate by providing research-based evidence
and statistical information to assist with the consideration of issues
around late abortion. The publication of the briefing was followed
by a meeting on January 27 in the Commons, chaired by Ian Gibson MP and
supported by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) and numerous
academics and doctors.
The attempt to tackle some of the myths created by the pro-life lobby
is to be welcomed. Likewise the effort to address and organise progressive-minded
members of the medical profession, like Doctors for a Womans Choice.
The influence of Spiked, a left-libertarian website and contemporary manifestation
of the former Revolutionary Communist Party, was palpable among some of
the main contributors at the Commons meeting. Unsurprisingly, given Spikeds
idealistic politics and aims, the question of class was missing. Despite
that the debate was worthwhile and the briefing should be studied.
The first speaker, Rodney Rivers from the Imperial College faculty of
medicine, addressed the question of foetal viability. One of the arguments
against late abortion has been that recent medical developments allow
for extremely premature babies to survive and grow into healthy children.
Therefore, the argument goes, by allowing abortions after 12 weeks, you
are in fact killing a baby which would be able to survive outside the
womb with the correct medical care. Dr Rivers showed that this was complete
fabrication on the part of the pro-life lobby. He provided statistics
which showed that infants born in Britain before 21 weeks have in fact
got a 0% chance of survival. Also, although survival between 24-28 weeks
has improved, only 15% actually end up being discharged from hospital
and the majority will be disabled.
The second speaker, Stuart Derbyshire, a professor at the University of
Pittsburgh, focused on the recent claims that foetuses can cry, walk and
smile from 15 weeks onwards. Images have been broadcast in various BBC
documentaries that appear to support that contention. The pro-life lobby
have seized on these images as yet more evidence that the foetus is aware
emotionally and cognitively - and can feel both emotional and physical
pain when an abortion is carried out. The Society for the Protection of
Unborn Children (Spuc) in particular has plastered the images all over
its website.
Derbyshire argued strongly against this proposition. He asserted that
the foetus is not aware, but reactive. Although the nervous system does
develop enormously during the period of gestation, observations of movement
within the womb do not tell us anything about foetal experience. In contrast
the intense tactile stimulation of birth triggers behavioural activity
and wakefulness and marks the transition from laying down brain tissue
to also organising that tissue with regards to the world now rudely thrust
upon it.
Therefore with birth the foetus becomes a social being - and begins to
learn how to interact with the world. Pain has a social meaning
- this allows diagnosis of medical complaints from the description given
of the pain. A foetus in the womb has spinal reflex actions that
are not dependent on brain activity and we should not give social content
to these reflexes. Clearly abortion is a social question that needs
to be decided at the level of society, not science; and science
is of course by no means neutral.
Some of the audience reacted with concern to his analysis. One academic
argued that of course a foetus can feel pain. Animals feel pain
- everybody knows that. So why not a foetus? She believed that,
as we do not have any direct evidence, we should assume that they
feel pain. Another was concerned that Derbyshires analysis
would lead to a situation where pain relief would not be applied to the
foetus in late abortions. However, Wendy Savage of Doctors for Choice
argued that the issue of foetal sentience is a red herring that has been
used politically to agitate against the provision of late abortions. She
stressed that of course sedatives and pain relief should be used so that
the abortion procedure is not distressing or unsafe. But the issue is
one of rights and the current practice of ascribing social qualities to
a foetus means that women are denied their right to choose.
Ann Furedi, chief executive of BPAS and supporter of Spiked, spoke from
the platform about the social reality of abortion for the women who come
to BPAS for help. She described the many and varied reasons behind the
requests for assistance. They range from lack of awareness of pregnancy
- especially common with teenagers or older menopausal women - through
to changes in a womans life, which mean she feels she can no longer
go through with the pregnancy, as well as foetal abnormality.
Her argument was that legislating for more accessible early abortion would
not lessen the need for late abortion. However, she also argued against
any change in the law at the present time, as she believed that in the
current climate it would inevitably have negative results for those seeking
late abortions. Instead she wanted to see a shift in public awareness
and opinion.
But the present legislative situation cannot be defended. Women have to
go abroad for abortions after 24 weeks and in some cases even sooner.
It has become extremely difficult to get an NHS abortion after 18 weeks
and in some parts of the country impossible. Furedis own experience
illustrates well the problems. BPAS has been targeted by The Sunday Telegraph
and some Conservative MPs for advising women of services abroad.
And, while it is true that making abortion illegal does not stop it happening,
it certainly makes it more dangerous and difficult. The current legal
restrictions may not be as bad as some MPs would wish for, but they nevertheless
stop some women from exercising their right to choose.
The meeting concluded with other speakers on medical procedures and antenatal
screening for abnormalities leading to late abortions. Again, the aim
was to discredit the myths and introduce some reality into the debate.
This is a debate that must be widened beyond the circles of health professionals
and academics. It must be taken to the left and to working class organisations.
The pro-life lobby are well able to popularise their own so-called medical
findings. We need to win our class to take a political stance for a womans
right to choose - therefore they need to be educated so that they can
deal with these often difficult medical and ethical questions. It is not
the enlightened ranks of academia that will change the world.
Anne Mc Shane
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