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Elizabeth502
Guest
That’s why we have medical professionals. You were not in the ER, nor was I. Ryecroft and her doctors were in the ER. The Catholic Church simply refuses to acknowledge the unusual and rare medical realities which do on occasion occur, requiring split-second decisions with the best medical information available and the best human predictability available, which is all God ever asks of us.The mother’s life is not inferior to the life of her unborn baby - ever. However, the mother has options available to her to avoid this life/death situation - even if these choices do not seem immediately evident or easy.
It was the educated opinion of the persons in the ER that ryecroft did not have options at the time which would allow both her and the still-developing life to survive. You’re speaking in generalities about the majority of cases. She’s speaking from experience about the specifics and the minority of cases. The vast majority of repliers on this thread and on ryecroft’s other thread are actually speaking from wishful-thinking. There have been close-calls in ER’s that have enabled both mother and tiny baby to live, but not all such decisions are clear-cut or as hopeful as all that. So many repliers assume that the doctors didn’t know what they were doing but that the repliers have superior medical knowledge and would have been able to save both lives. No, you don’t know that, and you never will, and to believe that is either ignorant or arrogant. You may know about other situations, but each medical case is unique and decisions are only made with the complete data on hand, and the complete training/experience afforded to those personnel.