Former NARAL president witnessed ‘decrepit,’ ‘dilapidated’ abortion centers
By Sarah TerzoAll too often, it is abortion facilities that serve the poor that are in the worst shape.
Before Kate Michelman became the president of NARAL, she got a job supervising a chain of abortion facilities.
In her book Protecting the Right to Choose, she says…
My first day on the job, a staff
member took me on a driving tour of our seven clinics, which primarily
served low income women. I was … distressed by the environment in which
those services were delivered. Many of the clinics were dilapidated. The
furniture was decrepit. The medical staff wore T–shirts and jeans. I
worried that women coming into these clinics might feel as though they
were not deserving of medical settings comparable to those more
prosperous women would expect. I made the same point to our board in
their next meeting.
“We should not provide medical
services in these settings, and the fact that we serve mostly poor women
does not justify the conditions of these clinics. It’s an insult to
poor women to strive for anything less than what other women would
expect.”
Dr. Kermit Gosnell, whose filthy, disgusting clinic was raided and later shut down, served mostly poor women and minorities. Gosnell is now serving three life sentences in jail for involuntary manslaughter in the botched abortion death of a woman (she was not the first) and for killing babies born alive after abortion procedures, which he routinely did.
While Michelman does not indicate that the abortion facilities she saw were as filthy as Gosnell’s, an environment of shabbiness can’t help but have a negative effect on aborting women.
Women deserve better than having their babies torn from their wombs in a shabby, dilapidated abortion center. Pro-lifers often speak about women being the second victims of abortion. Michelman’s account illustrates how true this is.
Finally, this quote shows how important it is to inspect abortion facilities regularly and to make them to adhere to basic safety standards. Perhaps abortion activists fight such requirements because they know many of the facilities operate in a substandard fashion.
Their argument is that abortion centers would close if they were to be held to the standards of other surgical facilities. Sadly, Michelman’s account indicates that they are right. Obviously, creating a safe environment for women fell by the wayside in these seven facilities.
Source: Kate Michelman Protecting the Right to Choose (New York: Plume, 2007) 33.
Editor’s note. This appeared in liveactionnews.org and is reposted with permission.
Source: NRLC News
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