H
hasikelee
Guest
Don’t worry, Bluerubies. I figured since you experienced this, you were probably well-informed on the issue. I just wanted background info for those browsing the thread who might not have any idea about HELLP.Has, thanks for writing. I was not trying to say that because of this abortion should be legal. it just seems as though some believe there is never a medical reason serious enough to “get rid” of the baby - and by get rid, I am not siding with abortion, I am siding with birthing the baby and then making the best decesion - is it able to live, will it live like a vegetable and should it be let to die after baptism for a life with God? Many are so many ways it can go. I am just trying to point out that there are some very serious medical disorders out there that affect pregnancy.
While the risk of death to the mother is up to 3%, the fatality rate for the child if not birthed immediately is 33%. There are group dedicated to HELLP, and there are so many stories of mothers who have lost their children. They are very beaten up about how their body could “kill” their children. My doctor described it as me being alergic to my son. Sometimes ending the pregnancy (not by abortion though, but through birthing) is best for mother and child.
“The maternal and fetal complications of HELLP syndrome are significant. The maternal mortality rate is 2 percent, and the perinatal mortality rate is 33 percent.24 …The most effective treatment for HELLP syndrome is prompt delivery.2,3…”
aafp.org/afp/990215ap/829.html
Infant mortality is a good tidbit on this syndrome. Isn’t there also a higher incidence of certain conditions in the infants as well?
Even as we look to solutions on a tertiary level, such as delivering a child to relieve the symptoms of HELLP, we must keep an eye on preventative treatment as well.
This is obvious in, say, those cases with asthma. Asthma requires treatment at all different times. Yes, at the time of the attack, instant treatment is required to reduce the risk of a fatality. But, tertiary treatment is often a choice between two risks, or one damaging procedure versus another one. With good preventative treatment, the incidence of an attack is lessened, thus giving the patient better health.
As in the case of the little girl born just under 22 weeks, we are seeing that increased attention to the development of science and technology is slowly chipping away at the justification for abortion. How long will this be allowed to go on before science is stifled?
Incidentally, my mom suffered from this syndrome and eclampsia with her 2nd to last child, a son. She also suffered from toxemia during 2 pregnancies. This leads to other questions, such as the effectiveness of our American medicine versus other treatments available.