The Sad Saga
Continues...
Web-Cam Abortions Continue While Iowa Medical Board Deliberates
For two years now, Planned
Parenthood of the Heartland (PPH), one of Planned Parenthood's
more aggressive affiliates, has been offering chemical abortions
via webcam at several of its clinics where no doctor is
physically present.
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Dr. Randall K.
O’Bannon |
On Friday, October 22nd,
the Des Moines Register reports (10/23/10), Jennifer Bowen, the
executive director of Iowa Right to Life, joined with several
others who appeared before the Iowa Board of Medicine arguing
that the web-cam setup violated state law requiring that all
abortions be performed by a physician. Bowen presented the board
with a petition bearing 3,900 signatures asking that the board
"Stop Web-cam Abortions in Iowa."
Over 1,500 women have used
the web-cam abortion system in Iowa since its inception, the
Register reports.
Despite the pleas of a
dozen speakers opposed to the practice (no one there defended
web-cam abortions), the board chose not to act, telling the Des
Moines Register the general issue of "telemedicine" remained
under study. An Iowa Board of Medicine ad hoc committee has
been, the paper says, "looking into what other states are
doing."
The Iowa board's legal
director called telemedicine "a very complex legal issue" that
is evolving, the Register reported, and noted its use in
radiology and psychiatry.
Defenders of the practice
have tried to argue that the physician fulfills his duty by
counseling the woman over the internet (RHRealityCheck,
8/23/10), but this ignores how significantly different chemical
abortions are from a radiologist's reading of an x-ray or some
electronic psychoanalysis.
A radiologist typically
shares his recommendation with another doctor treating the
patient, determining whether that doctor, there treating the
patient in the hospital or his or her office, will provide a
splint or cast or surgery. If psychotherapy is limited to
counseling sessions and the prescription of medication, this
could perhaps be handled by web-cam, but no one is going to be
asked to do their own brain surgery over the internet.
Women having chemical
abortions will endure significant pain and bleeding, even when
things go as planned. Complications like hemorrhage are common,
and deadly infections have taken the lives of several chemical
abortion patients in the ten years since RU486 was approved in
the U.S.
Those are hardly the sort
of things that can be treated over a web-cam.
Perhaps the Iowa Board of
Medicine should remember that the physician's first duty is to
"do no harm."
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Part Four
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