LAW
PROTECTING UNBORN CHILDREN CAPABLE OF FEELING
PAIN
CHALLENGED IN IDAHO; FEDERAL JUDICIAL HEARING
SCHEDULED
WASHINGTON – An Idaho law
protecting unborn children who are capable of
feeling pain from abortion has been challenged
in the U.S. District Court for Idaho. A
hearing on a request
for a temporary restraining order is scheduled
in federal district court for September 8.
The Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act was
passed by the Idaho state legislature by
overwhelming majorities earlier this spring. In
passing the law, the legislature determined that
there is substantial medical evidence concluding
that unborn children are capable of experiencing
pain and that the state has a compelling state
interest in protecting these pain-capable
children.
“Unborn children recoil from
painful stimuli, their stress hormones increase
when they are subjected to any painful stimuli,
and they require anesthesia for fetal surgery,"
said Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D., director of
state legislation for the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC). “We
are confident that the Supreme Court will
ultimately agree and will recognize the right of
the state to protect these children from the
excruciatingly painful death of abortion.”
A significant number of
scientific studies support the state’s
conclusion that unborn babies are capable of
feeling pain by twenty weeks (20) weeks after
fertilization. On average, 18,000 abortions are
performed every year in the United States on
these pain-capable children, including at some
Planned Parenthood clinics. An online library of
research and further information is available at
www.doctorsonfetalpain.com.
The complaint in the case claims
that the law fails to contain a constitutionally
acceptable exception allowing for an abortion if
necessary to preserve the health of the mother.
That contention is rebutted by
Dr. Sean Patrick Kenney, M.D., a board certified
obstetrician/gynecologist, and assistant
clinical professor at Creighton University
School of Medicine in Omaha, Nebraska.
“The language of the law makes
fully adequate provision for those rare cases,
probably occurring no more than 1-2 times per
5,000 births, when medical complications require
premature delivery or abortion of an unborn
child after the stage at which the child is
capable of feeling pain,”
noted Dr. Kenney.
Founded in 1968, the National
Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the federation
of 50 state right-to-life affiliates and more
than 3,000 local chapters, is the nation's
oldest and largest national grassroots pro-life
organization. Recognized as the flagship of the
pro-life movement, NRLC works through
legislation and education to protect innocent
human life from abortion, infanticide, assisted
suicide and euthanasia.