This is what I don’t understand, and typically I can follow moral logic fairly well. I don’t think D&C is ever permitted, but why not delivery of the child as an outside shot at saving it? Disregarding the mother vs. child factor, if the child will certainly die in the womb then how is pre-viability delivery immoral. I’m not talking about delivering the child and then leaving it on a cold table, but rather doing whatever longshot means of treatment or comfort possible. Who knows, perhaps techniques would be stumbled upon that would push viability back another couple of months.
Obviously every case is unique, with different medical complications involved. I’m speaking purely of a hypothetical situation in which the child is “doomed in the womb”. What if the mother is certainly dying within the next day or two, and is 17 weeks pregnant. Do you say you won’t even try to deliver the child because it has almost no chance outside the womb? How does that make any sense?
Peace and God bless!
There are things that can be done if a child is delivered prematurely, usually nothing is done before the age of viability (which is also the age after which elective abortion is no longer an option) such as putting the child on a ventilator, nasogastric feeding tube or IV nutrition, oxygenation, specialized incubators, etc. By law, during an abortion, if the infant was not successfully killed prior to the procedure (by law Infanticide must proceed the delivery procedure when some form of ‘delivery’ is required) and signs of life are discovered once the cervix has been dilated or the abdomen and uterus opened then the child must be treated as if viable and all methods available to help save the life must be taken, even if it is statistically impossible to do anything but prolong the life.
When I was talking about D&C for incomplete abortion you must understand that dilation and curettage is a procedure in itself that is not just used to terminate a pregnancy. Sometimes a woman may lose the child via miscarriage (spontaneous abortion) but the discharge of the fetus and the extra-embryonic tissues was incomplete. This can lead to grave illness in the women, including septicemia and damage to the uterus and cervix that could complicate further reproductive attempts. Thus we must go in, dilate the cervix to gain access (if it is not still sufficiently dilated) and use a curettage to ‘scrap’ the uterus.
I have had patients in the ER who have needed a D&C after an incomplete spontaneous abortion and been very morally conflicted because they have been taught that D&C=Abortion and therefore even though there is no longer a baby (or at least most of the baby is gone) they would be morally remiss if they consented to the D&C. It is a delicate matter and I personally would love to know what - if anything - the Church teaches about a D&C done in the case of an incomplete spontaneous abortion. Or what the church teaches about delivering a still-born when we confirm the baby has died
in utero and needs to be removed either through induced vaginal delivery or through a hysterotomy.
In a situation like the one this woman and her baby and her husband and her physicians found themselves in, I think choosing to deliver the child when she arrived at the hospital and they determined that she was undergoing a spontaneous abortion would have been the best compromise, and that they should have taken measures to try and save the baby, even though it’s extremely unlikely the baby would have lived long if it survived delivery (as I suspect parts of it may already have been ‘dead’), that way at least the mother’s life could have been saved, and the physicians would have done their best to try and save the baby or at least prolong it’s life and no ‘abortion’ would have been performed.
I’m thinking about a thread I read here in the last few days about baby’s with anencephaly (no head/brain) where I argued that unless carrying the unviable child to term was placing the mother at acute risk then there was no harm in allowing the child to be born. The child would die anyway, or perhaps survived for a few hours to a few days on radical life support, but no ‘abortion’ would have been performed.
Regards,
-Mharren