Dying babies shouldn’t be viewed as spare parts
By Anthony OzimicEditor’s note. This analysis is provided by our friends at SPUC, the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children.
The front-page story of last weekend’s Mail on Sunday newspaper revealed proposals [by The National Health Service] to ask mothers of terminally-ill unborn children to consider donating their babies’ organs. The proposal includes asking mothers to consider not choosing abortion in order to make organs available after birth.
From the story:
“Women whose babies develop fatal
defects in the early stages of pregnancy will be given advice on going
ahead with the birth so the NHS can harvest their organs, The Mail on
Sunday can reveal. Most expectant mothers opt for termination after
being told the devastating news their child has no chance of survival
once born. But now, amid a chronic shortage of donated organs, mums will
be ‘supported’ to have the baby at nine months so that the child’s
vital organs can be taken for transplant … The move was revealed at a
medical conference where NHS transplant surgeons said they wanted to
take more organs from babies nationally to address a dire shortage.”
Secondly, it could lead to babies being kept alive artificially and killed for their organs.
Thirdly, it implies that babies can be reduced to spare-parts. Other problematic ethical issues include the legal ownership of the babies’ bodies, inaccurate diagnoses of disability, and over-estimated assessments of the need for organ donations.
Humane approach needed
Dr Anthony McCarthy, a bioethicist and SPUC’s director of education, explains further:
“Parents should be offered the
humane approach of ‘perinatal hospice’ : loving welcome and care for
their dying baby. Babies should be spared abortion because they are
babies – not because they are useful to others if taken to term.
“It is one thing for the baby to
be treasured during life, then used for organ donation after he or she
has truly died and the parents have said goodbye. It is something quite
different for the baby to be treated as valuable only as means to an
end, not as someone’s son or daughter whose life is precious however
brief that life may be.
Serious ethical questions
“With some kinds of organ
harvesting such as from so-called ‘beating heart cadavers’, there are
also very serious questions whether the donor is in fact still alive
when the organs are taken. Lethal discrimination against the unborn has
undermined the dignity of the disabled and dying after birth as well. In
that context it is perhaps unsurprising that sick babies are not seen
as valuable in themselves when it comes to organ harvesting.”
In brief, the proposals imply a discriminatory disrespect towards the
lives and dignity of disabled people both before and after birth. It
was therefore encouraging to see a high-profile celebrity defend the
value of her disabled child.Katie Price, the glamour model, said:
“I was young when I had Harvey
and I admit it: If I’d have known he was blind when I had him, as harsh
as it sounds, I probably would have aborted him … Now if they said I was
going to have a child with disabilities, I would definitely keep it. I
would even adopt a child with disabilities … I absolutely love Harvey so
much. I would never change anything about him … Yes it’s challenging,
but it’s also rewarding. He’s a great character and I love him. I don’t
think anyone should be ashamed at all if they’ve got a child with
disabilities.”Source: NRLC News
No comments:
Post a Comment