MEDICAL ADVANCES

Calgary Herald - March 20, 2005  
Medical advances alter the debate  
Full-term abortion on demand at odds with many jurisdictions

Saturday's debate and vote on the Conservative party floor on the issue of  abortion won't end the acrimony in either the party of a divided nation. But  purist pro-choicers and the other parties - who also have pro-lifers in  their midst - should remember that Canada's position on abortion is out of  step with even more socially liberal countries in Europe. While restrictions  on abortion vary, France, Germany, Belgium, Greece and Hungary limit  abortion on demand to 12 weeks; Sweden and Norway to 18 weeks; and Great  Britain's cutoff date is 24 weeks. Other European countries range from  virtual prohibition (Poland) to virtually no limit (the Czech Republic). But  most have some limit. And even in those with later restrictions, the UK for  example, there is debate on moving it to earlier stages in gestation.

In Britain, Conservative Leader Michael Howard wants abortion on demand  restricted to the first 20 weeks. While British Prime Minister Tony Blair  objects to his political opponent's proposal, he does not object to the  24-week limit. The reasoning on both cases is that ever more fetuses can  survive outside of the womb at earlier stages in a pregnancy because of  advances in medical technology. (In one widely noted case in November 2002,  British baby Heather Pope was born prematurely at 23 weeks of gestation, and  survived.) Thus, it is becoming more difficult to square how, on one hand,  medical professionals can go to great efforts to nurture premature babies  and yet physicians, in some cases literally down the hall, terminate fetuses  older than that.

Advances in prenatal surgery further complicate the discussion. In August  1999, a 21-week old fetus survived experimental surgery at Vanderbilt  University hospital in Nashville, Tenn. Dr. Joseph Bruner cut into the  mother's abdomen, lifted the uterus out of her body, made an incision in the  uterus, removed the fetus, repaired the spinal defect, and reinserted him  back inside his mother's body. Fifteen weeks later, Samuel Armas was born.  Are the politicians in our land so sure that majority opinion is comfortable  with abortions at that same stage?

While it would satisfy neither the polarized pro-choice or pro-life camps,  the European position of imposing a time limit is the compromise that seems  closest to majority Canadian values. Those who claim that the vast majority  of Canadians support terminated pregnancies - in law - up until the natural  end of a pregnancy overplay their hand. A 2001 Gallup poll probed views with  uncommon clarity. It asked: "Do you think abortions should be legal under  any circumstances, legal under certain circumstances or illegal in all  circumstances and in what circumstances?" A minority - 32% - said abortion  should be legal in all circumstances. A minority - 14% - said abortion  should be illegal in all circumstances. A slim majority, 52%, said abortion  should be legal only in certain circumstances. In other words, almost  two-thirds of Canadians do not think abortion should be legal for all nine  months of a pregnancy.

And to nervous Canadian politicians who resist such public discussion, it is  worth noting the British Conservatives and Howard have not suffered in polls  for having pushed the issue. Even the British law which restricts abortion  at 24 weeks was not the original limit; the 1967 law was updated in 1990  from 28 weeks to reflect advances in medicine and the ability of  ever-earlier premature babies to survive.

For Canadians, the 1988 Supreme Court ruling which struck down abortion  legislation was not a decision to give women a constitutional right to  terminate their pregnancy at all stages. Such de facto legal freedom exists  only because the unelected Senate was unwilling to pass a compromise. A  draft 1990 law that would have made abortions legal only until week 20 of a  pregnancy passed Parliament by a vote of 140-131, but died by one vote in  the Senate. Given that technology allows premature babies to survive much  earlier than they could in 1973 or 1988, Parliament's 1990 law seems more  sensible than ever. It is also likely the one that most reflects the  majority Canadian view and would put us in step with most of Europe.

Limits on abortion on demand

Selected comparisons

Britain 24 weeks
France 12 weeks
Germany 12 weeks  
Belgium 12 weeks  
Denmark 12 weeks  
Sweden 18 weeks  
Norway 18 weeks  
Italy 13 weeks  
Greece 12 weeks  
Hungary 12 weeks  
Canada No limit

Source: Daily Mail

© The Calgary Herald 2005