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Author Topic: Pregnant women face abortion ban in Ireland even if they're a suicide risk  (Read 314 times)

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Offline Semicolon

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Quote from: Henry McDonald
Pregnant women in Ireland could be blocked from having an abortion even if they are at risk of suicide after conceiving as a result of rape or incest, under new guidelines issued to Irish doctors.

Experts warned that the Guidance Document for Health Professionals, which has yet to be made public but has been obtained by the Guardian, will give power to doctors, obstetricians and psychiatrists to prevent vulnerable women from terminating their pregnancies.

Some clinicians, including one of the Irish Republic's leading psychiatrists, said the rules would leave women "at the mercy of a local, moral and political lottery". Veronica O'Keane, professor of psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin, said a woman could potentially have to see up to seven medical experts before getting a decision on her right to an abortion.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which has also been shown the document, has described the guidance on dealing with women contemplating suicide as "an excessive degree of scrutiny by medical professionals".

The guidelines were drawn up after the Irish government introduced legislation last year to allow for abortion in extremely limited circumstances. The law followed the death of Savita Halappanavar, 31, who was denied an emergency termination that could have saved her life.

Pro-choice campaigners are concerned that conservative attitudes among health professionals will put more women's lives at risk. More than 100 Irish psychiatrists – nearly one in three in the country – signed a statement last year opposing any kind of abortion reform, including those cases of women at risk of suicide.

The 108-page guide does not include provisions for an independent committee to make decisions on treating those with "suicidal intent", which was a key demand among campaigners for reform. They argue an independent committee would be more objective than local medics and allow women more privacy.

Pro-choice doctors are also concerned that the language in the first few pages of the guidelines is more stridently anti-abortion than last year's law. In its introduction, the document states that "the purpose of this act is to restate the general prohibition on abortion in Ireland". Medical professionals are also advised on the first page that the act provides "a clear criminal prohibition on abortion".

On page 10, a diagram explaining the procedure for applying for a termination makes clear to Irish doctors that the initial referral for women including those with "suicidal intent" begins with her own GP.

If the GP agrees, he or she will refer the woman to three doctors – including one obstetrician and two psychiatrists – who will decide whether there is a real risk to the woman's life through suicide. If her request is rejected, she will go through an appeal system involving another two psychiatrists and another obstetrician.

The guidance states that the first psychiatrist to assess the woman has the right to "seek a second psychiatric assessment" or appoint a psychiatrist of their own choice. Critics say this will allow anti-abortion psychiatrists to recommend a colleague sharing the same views.

On the same page it advises that any of three medical experts, including an obstetrician, can assess a woman with suicidal intent and certify whether or not the woman should be allowed an abortion – although obstetricians have no mental health training.

O'Keane, a consultant psychiatrist for more than 21 years, said because there was no national body to rule on these cases vulnerable women were left "at the mercy of a local, moral and political lottery. They could come up against anti-choice physicians who in effect become conscientious obstructors to abortion."

She added: "The repeated examination of a woman's mental state by at least four doctors, and possibly seven, the repeated questioning specifically about suicidal ideation and intent, will not only be overly invasive, confusing and distressing emotionally, it will also be time-consuming in a period of crisis when a suicidal woman needs access to a termination as soon as possible."

She called the guidelines "completely inappropriate". "I would have preferred a national review panel to make these decisions because Ireland is a small country," she said. "It would have been better in terms of privacy and access to mental health professionals who are committed to enacting the spirit of the legislation. We have a very strong anti-choice lobby in psychiatry and there should have been procedures put in place to allow women to bypass them and their moral, political, theocratic obstacles."

O'Keane pointed out that the section called "Risk to life from Suicidal Intent" means pregnant women have to state explicitly that they are going to kill themselves before being considered for a termination.

"This is very bad practice because if psychiatrists are practising within these guidelines then that will be the stipulation, that the woman in question must state that. Yet in the majority of cases of suicide that psychiatrists deal with there is no stated intention of killing themselves.

"The terms of reference are too narrow and dangerous, and we in Ireland have very high rates of suicide and even a government drive to reduce suicide numbers. In these guidelines, what we are actually doing is saying to Irish women, 'You have to actually tell us that you're going to kill yourself or you won't get that abortion.' It is completely contrary to good psychiatric practice."

A spokesman for the Department of Health in Dublin said that the guidelines were not yet finalised and have to be ratified by the new Irish health minister, Leo Varadkar. He said that the publication of the guidance was "fairly imminent" once it was signed off by the minister. "It would not be appropriate to make any comment on this further at this juncture."

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Offline Arya Quinn

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In Northern Ireland abortion in general is illegal. No matter the circumstances.

So well fucking done Ireland for trying to be more like your neighbor who lives in the fucking dark ages. When you updated your abortion bill a few years ago (after an incident in which the mother died in miscarriage Link ) I thought that you'd stepped into the 21st century.

Guess you're getting in your Delorian and going back to the dark ages again.  :dunno:

Offline Semicolon

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In Northern Ireland abortion in general is illegal. No matter the circumstances.

So well fucking done Ireland for trying to be more like your neighbor who lives in the fucking dark ages. When you updated your abortion bill a few years ago (after an incident in which the mother died in miscarriage Link ) I thought that you'd stepped into the 21st century.

Guess you're getting in your Delorian and going back to the dark ages again.  :dunno:

Why not? The DeLorean was made in Northern Ireland. :facepalm2:

It sounds like a conservative's dream, to live in a Christian country with no abortion.
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Quote from: iamnotaparakeet
Jesus died on the cross to show us that BDSM is a legitimate form of love.
There is only one truth and it is that people do have penises of different sizes and one of them is the longest.

Offline Arya Quinn

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In Northern Ireland abortion in general is illegal. No matter the circumstances.

So well fucking done Ireland for trying to be more like your neighbor who lives in the fucking dark ages. When you updated your abortion bill a few years ago (after an incident in which the mother died in miscarriage Link ) I thought that you'd stepped into the 21st century.

Guess you're getting in your Delorian and going back to the dark ages again.  :dunno:

Why not? The DeLorean was made in Northern Ireland. :facepalm2:

It sounds like a conservative's dream, to live in a Christian country with no abortion.

Depends on what kind of Conservative you're talking about. If it's an American Conservative, then yes.

A British Conservative's dreamworld is where the poor don't care about anything. 

Offline Semicolon

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In Northern Ireland abortion in general is illegal. No matter the circumstances.

So well fucking done Ireland for trying to be more like your neighbor who lives in the fucking dark ages. When you updated your abortion bill a few years ago (after an incident in which the mother died in miscarriage Link ) I thought that you'd stepped into the 21st century.

Guess you're getting in your Delorian and going back to the dark ages again.  :dunno:

Why not? The DeLorean was made in Northern Ireland. :facepalm2:

It sounds like a conservative's dream, to live in a Christian country with no abortion.

Depends on what kind of Conservative you're talking about. If it's an American Conservative, then yes.

A British Conservative's dreamworld is where the poor don't care about anything.

Yes, an American conservative. American conservatives would also generally cut benefits for the poor.
I2 has a smiley for everything. Even a hamster wheel. :hamsterwheel:

Quote from: iamnotaparakeet
Jesus died on the cross to show us that BDSM is a legitimate form of love.
There is only one truth and it is that people do have penises of different sizes and one of them is the longest.

Offline 'andersom'

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So, no chance of [urlhttps://www.womenonwaves.org/nl/]women on waves[/url] cutting Ireland from their visiting list then.
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Offline Semicolon

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So, no chance of women on waves cutting Ireland from their visiting list then.

Fixed. :M

I don't know; that page is half Dutch. :GA:
I2 has a smiley for everything. Even a hamster wheel. :hamsterwheel:

Quote from: iamnotaparakeet
Jesus died on the cross to show us that BDSM is a legitimate form of love.
There is only one truth and it is that people do have penises of different sizes and one of them is the longest.