V
vames
Guest
Your colleague said that “frequently medication treatment of pregnant women tends to be conservative for fear of exposing the baby to what would be a high dosage of drug crossing the placental blood barrier”.At the very minimum, it neglected to take into account what the teachings of the magisterium actually are, which would have included (and insisted on) adequate treatment of the infection and adequate pain control for the mother.
It’s not implausible, then, that the reason for the inadequate pain management was the same - wanting to protect the dying baby instead of protecting the mother in pain.
As this nurse said:
“Just to provide a background to the medics action in respect of providing pain management: As there would appear to have been a foetal heartbeat present the foetus was still viable (horrible word — apologies). The foetus remains viable until essentially a heartbeat is no longer present. As such, medics have to treat the mother as though a healthy foetus is going to be given birth to, resulting in reduced pain management, reduced strength of pain management leading to reduced efficiency of said pain management. That along with the fact that pain arising from miscarriage is something monumentally painful for any woman who has experienced such a thing.”
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