B
BiologyBrain
Guest
issue. it is an issue that no one has brought up. It might be on one of the similar threads on this topic, but I have read most of the previous discussions, and don’t recall that being addressed.One of the tangential but nevertheless very operative factors in medical advice is the **legal **
The OP is talking about an extremely high-risk pregnancy. High-risk pregnancy, to doctors, means two things: risk to child and/or risk to mother. The failure of a doctor to inform fully as to possible and probable medical consequences will tend to result in a lawsuit of gigantic proportions, which, further, can end his or her practice. Along with that full information, it is expected that the doctor will advise the patient – provide an opinion as to the outcome most likely to ensure the mother’s safety. The patient & the family is not interested in just hearing: “You have a ___% of this happening and a ___% of that happening.” The next expected sentence is always, “Therefore, I advise you to _________.” And the advice is expected to lean toward the most cautious advice.
Good for Gianna Beretta Molla. I know all about her. However, in a way, understand that she did assent to a kind of passive suicide, as she understood the extremely high risk, but made a decision that, should it come to one life over another, she was willing to sacrifice her own. In this country, in the 21st century, I’ll bet that in a non-Catholic hospital, should a mother make an identical decision, the doctor either has a tape recorder handy, an army of lawyers standing there, or is making profuse notes for the file.
Gianna Beretta Molla preferred her unborn child’s life to her own. In this country, in this day, if a doctor believes with his advanced medical experience that a choice between two lives is indicated, he will advise for saving the mother’s. That doesn’t mean that the mother is obliged to accept the advice. But he is legally obliged to communicate likely outcomes, and in our litigious society, he is from a practical viewpoint obliged to suggest the better or best of several options.
Perhaps Catholic doctors, or doctors practicing in Catholic hospitals, feel perfectly safe performing legal high-wire acts, but I’ll tell you that other doctors do not.
The OP wasn’t asking for the legal perspective - OP was asking for the moral perspective.
Also, to my knowledge all doctors require someone to sign a release prior to any type of procedure/surgery/etc indicating that they should not be held liable for the outcome, they explained the risks, benefits, possible outcomes, etc with you and you understand them as such. That’s really all that’s necessary even in a situation such as this. Caring for both mother & child is not a ‘high wire act’, it is normal, responsible, compassionate ob/gyn practice. Even if the doctor doesn’t give exact percentages, they are obligated to give all the possible benefits, risks, outcomes, etc. They also advise one way or another, but the ultimate decision is the patient’s (or family depending on the situation). Once the doctor fufills their obligation of informing the patient, its up to the patient to ask any pertinent questions - such as (in this instance) what will happen to the baby? I will concede that there may be more release statements needed to undergo something risky, but that’s typical for any risky procedure - whether you’re pregnant or not.