Tag Archives: Abortion

File Pics Mater hospital representative says it cannot comply' with abortion legislation.

I recall talking to someone whose wife had recently experienced an emergency during pregnancy.

Admitted under her gynaecologist in a very well regarded religious-ethos hospital, she was in a serious condition and needed an emergency termination. A member of medical staff pulled the husband aside and advised him, in an undertone, to seek a transfer to another hospital in another part of the country, immediately, because he could not guarantee that she’d be given the lifesaving treatment she needed in this hospital, because of its religious ethos. She was transferred to a hospital three hours away by ambulance, and, after being treated as required, made a full recovery.

My friend thought this legislation would make that situation a thing of the past, but he was wrong.

We’re back to a situation where a woman who is pregnant – and has the money to choose where she is treated – will have to spend some time researching the religious ‘ethos’ of her hospital and even her doctor to ensure that she will be treated in accordance with the law. If – like most of us – she doesn’t have a choice about where she’s treated, a few decades of the Rosary might be advisable instead.

No Mater what (Deirdre O’Shaughnessy, Cork Independent)

Previously: “Would He Prefer For Both Of Them To Die?”

Nothing Really Maters

(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

shame

The No More Shame Project launches tonight in the Mariah Black Gallery in the Triskel Arts Centre, Tobin St, Cork. The project, led by Laura Kinsella, a researcher and activist media producer, and Liz Dunphy, journalist and filmmaker, aims to break the silence of the 12 women who leave Ireland daily to terminate pregnancies. “For too long a culture of silence has choked progress, ensuring continued legal barriers to basic reproductive rights,” says Dr Sandra McEvoy of the department of women’s studies at University College Cork.

Women tell abortion stories as they urge No More Shame (Dan Buckley, Irish Examiner)

No More Shame (Facebook)

doran

“The Mater can’t carry out abortions because it goes against its ethos. I would be very concerned that the Minister [for Health, James Reilly] sees fit to make it impossible for hospitals to have their own ethos.”

Father Kevin Doran, a member of the board of governors at the Mater Hospital quoted  in today’s Irish Times.

Ethos, you say?

The three members of the board of Dublin’s Mater Hospital were key to the decision to stop trials of the drug for lung cancer patients.
They objected because female patients who get could get pregnant would have to take contraceptives under the treatment.
The subcommittee of the board – including  Fr Kevin Doran – were delegated the task of examining the conditions attached to testing the drug.

Ah, that kind of ethos.

Three who stopped the cancer tests (Eilish O’Regan and David Quinn/Irish Independent, October 2005)

Priest on Mater board says hospital cannot carry out abortions (Kitty Holland, Irish Times)

Related: Free contraceptive pill halves Norway’s abortion rate (The Local.no)

Via Prof John Crown

3215Back in the day.

Images from the Irish women’s movement by Rose Comiskey part of an exhibition entitled Against The Tide, at the Avenue Road Gallery, Portobello, Dublin in association with PhotoIreland Festival 2013.

Until TOMORROW.

The exhibition is photographic record of the “campaign for reproductive rights in Ireland in the 1980s” and the passing of the 1992 amendment to the Irish Constitution.

Rose writes:

Images 1 and 3 are from a right to know march in Dublin c1985. It was illegal to publish any information on abortion and English magazines and newspapers were censored as they came into the country….Image 2 is of a protest puppet – a judge – one of two. The other was a bishop puppet… and Image 4 is from an event in 1992 after the X Case when hundreds of women went to Holyhead on the ferry for the purpose of bringing back information on abortion.

 

Against The Tide (Avenue Road Gallery)

Pics: Rose Comiskey

Thanks Therese Caherty

Abortion-stats-by-Irish-countyJane Ruffino of GetBulb has done a bit more digging on the abortion stats released recently from the UK.

She says:

Abortion rates have been dropping everywhere over the past three decades, including among women resident Ireland. The numbers traveling to the UK have dropped to about 4000, from a 2001 peak of more than 6,600 (which was also the year emergency contraception became available in Ireland).

 

More here Home and away: mapping Irish abortion statistics.

Previously: Thousands are travelling

 

 

Death shows need for abortion services, family planning organisation says (Kitty Holland, Irish Times)

Woman’s tragic death after abortion in UK (Abortion Rights Campaign)

Previously: ‘A Message From Caroline Simons At This Important Time’

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The 32-year-old woman, who was a foreign national living in Ireland, underwent an abortion at a Marie Stopes clinic in west London. However, she died in a taxi hours after the procedure.

The woman, who was legally resident in Ireland, had sought an abortion at a maternity hospital in Dublin but had been told that it was not legally possible to provide one in this jurisdiction.

The woman died in January 2012. An inquest has not yet been held into the woman’s death as the police investigation is continuing.The husband said the couple was told that treatment of the condition could involve a procedure that would leave her infertile. “We were worried about what would happen when she became pregnant again,” he said.

She was sick, but we were told that nothing could be done in Ireland. We were left on our own to deal with it. We didn’t get any help at all,” he said.

Police in London investigate case of woman who died after travelling from Dublin to UK for abortion (Carl O’Brien, Irish Times)

 UPDATE:

Not exactly.

RTÉ court reporter Vivienne Traynor spoke with Seán O’Rourke on the News At One about the case.

Vivienne Traynor: “In these proceedings the man is looking for a number of orders: restraining her from having an abortion or from leaving the jurisdiction.
He also seeks an injunction restraining her parents from bringing her out of the jurisdiction until it can be ascertained that she wants to go. The man is asking the court to vindicate the rights of the unborn child. And he also wants the court to order an urgent investigation to see if the young woman is being brought to the UK against her will, before the court would permit her to leave the country for an abortion.
He says he has no desire to restrain her from travelling, should that be her freely-held will. Now the court was told that the couple have known each other for a year but the family have not accepted their relationship. He says his girlfriend’s family are deeply unhappy with the fact that she’s in a relationship with someone of non-European origin.
But he said that he believes his girlfriend wants to have the baby, that she’d registered with the maternity hospital and was looking forward to having a scan in the near future. And that she’d also gone to buy baby clothes for the child.
Now, Ms Justice Mary Laffoy granted the man permission to serve notice of the proceedings against his girlfriend.
She’s also directed that the Attorney General be made a notice party to these proceedings so the case may return to court today. It’s not certain that it will return today but there’s a possibility that it will come back before the court.”

Sean O’Rourke: “But clearly, in the view of the person taking this case, there’s an element of urgency to this?”

Traynor: “Yes, absolutely. He wants the court to direct that an urgent investigation be carried out, as to whether or not this is her decision, that she would travel or be travelling. Also, he wants an order that the parents cannot take her out of the jurisdiction.”

UPDATE:

UPDATE:

90307495(Fianna Fail Senator Jim Walsh)

On the Protection of Life During Pregnancy bill

“I oppose the legislation because it is anti-women. It disempowers women and the experience everywhere is that women in the poorer socio-economic groups are disempowered and suffer most from this. It is also about men failing to take responsibility.

In a booklet written by Dr. Pravin Thevathasan [Editor Of The Catholic Medical Quarterly] , post-abortion trauma is described as the psychological consequence of repressed grief following abortion. He attributes it to low self-esteem and it may be either a symptom of post-abortion trauma or the root cause.

Guilt may be a healthy sign that a person is gaining insight into the significance of abortion. It will be accompanied by anger when the woman feels that the decision to abort was left to, that is, made by, other people.

Guilt may be the beginning of healing, so those who campaign for guilt-free abortion are attempting to rob human beings of their very humanity. Suicidal thoughts are not uncommon and may be seen as an unhealthy attempt to atone for the destructive act of abortion.

Broken relationships are common following abortion. This is because the father and/or mother may be silently grieving for the aborted child and because either parent may feel let down, manipulated, ignored, spurned – even disgusted – by the other.

Anger is often directed at the father of the aborted child, at friends or other relatives who suggested the abortion…Some women have flashbacks when they pass any hospital or clinic where abortions are done [and some when they give birth to another child]. Anniversaries – of the conception, the abortion and the projected date of birth – can produce sudden low moods. alcohol abuse as a means of coping with the emotional pain of abortion is common, as are drug abuse, sexual promiscuity and other forms of addiction.”

 

…is this medieval barbaric procedure the best we can offer a woman who has an unwanted pregnancy and who can, no doubt, be in serious distress?

Some years ago, the actress Shelley Winters talked about her two abortions. She said she would give up everything, including her money and Academy awards, if only she could have those children now. Gloria Swanson begins and ends her autobiography with lamentations over her aborted child. Recently, other celebrities including Sharon Osbourne and Nicole Appleton spoke of their heartbreak following abortion.

 

Senator Jim Walsh, in the Seanad yesterday.

 

Via Kildare Street.com

An interactive map showing the numbers of Irish citizens travelling from the UK to avail of abortion services in 2012 broken down into geographic regions.

Figures published last week by the UK Department of Health show a total of 3,982 women with Irish addresses accessed abortion services in the UK.

By Phil Lang who writes:

There were 889 women who didn’t specify what region they came from, so this number is not represented in this visualisation. However, I still think that it makes for an interesting exploration.

Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill due before Seanad (RTE)