And what happens if a women ends up with 2 ectopic pregnancies, one after the other? There goes her chance at having children! As sad as it is having to remove a fetus directly, it saves the woman’s Fallopian tube and does not have her fertility decreased or eliminated entirely. There is also the possibility of transferring, or trying to transfer the fetus to the uterus and either it will stick or it won’t and if it does, great but if it doesn’t… well as horrible as it is going to sound, they were an ectopic pregnancy and were basically destined to die anyway. At least if you transfer them to the uterus you are trying to give them a chance.
Also, to clear up confusion on my previous point. In Catholic hospitals, there is a rule that an abortion, to remove a child after a mother miscarries, must be carried out after the fetal heartbeat is no longer there. This is a problem because infection can set into the mother if the fetus is not removed quick enough. Women have died or gone septic because the hospital prolonged giving the women the care she deserved because the hospital put there beliefs before the wishes of there patient.
It’s an issue of ethics and in medical care, you have to separate your views and beliefs and do what’s best by the patient and there wants for there life and body. It is ethically wrong to force your beliefs on another person. This actually happened in Ireland where a Hindu women had a miscarriage, wanted the baby removed, kept telling staff she was Hindu and didn’t believe in the Catholic views and went septic because the hospital refused to remove the already dying baby, which was under 20 weeks gestation, until the fetal heartbeat was gone, by which point the women died of septic shock. Doctors and medical staff have been fired for performing abortions on women and catholic hospitals stripped of there Catholic name for putting the life of the mother over the baby, who was going to die anyway.
You are referring to the Savita case here in Ireland? With respect you have some facts incorrect, It was established at the inquiry that there was medical negligence in that medical staff failed and neglected to test for sepsis in time. test for sepsis in time. She would have been treated and lived else She died because of that culpable negligence and not as you have stated