Ohio Bill Would Allow Women Seeking Abortion To View Ultrasound Image
Main Category: AbortionAlso Included In: MRI / PET / Ultrasound
Article Date: 23 Oct 2007 - 7:00 PDT
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Ohio state Sen. Gary Cates (R) recently proposed a measure (SB 230) that would give a woman seeking an abortion the option of viewing an ultrasound image of her fetus before undergoing the procedure, the AP/Cleveland Plain Dealer reports.
Mark Lally, legal director for Ohio Right to Life, said abortion-rights opponents believe viewing ultrasound images might influence women seeking abortions to reconsider undergoing the procedure. "We have encountered women who, after having abortions, saw ultrasounds in other contexts of other children and they say, 'Hey, that's about the same age the child that I aborted was,' and they have adverse emotional reactions," Lally said.
Kellie Copeland, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio, said the organization is "remaining neutral on the bill because, as it is right now, it's telling clinics to do what they already do." Gary Dougherty, executive director of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of Ohio, said, "It's our standard practice. ... If somebody asks to see [an ultrasound image], we're going to show it to them -- no question." According to the National Right to Life Committee, 11 states have passed laws requiring that ultrasounds be offered to women (Carr Smyth, AP/Cleveland Plain Dealer, 10/18).
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Permission Not Needed
posted by Ruth on 23 Oct 2007 at 9:32 amSenator Gary Cates underestimates women. We are well aware of our ability to examine an ultrasound of the fetus or embryo prior to abortion. We do not require his permission to do so.
Are women unhappy following an abortion? One would expect mixed feelings. This is surgery; one does not expect to feel 'happy' after an appendectomy either. In each case, 'relieved' might be the more appropriate term; 'sad' is probably in there, too. Lack of unrelieved joy does not equate with regret.
The push of this legislation demeans women. It assumes an inability to manage our own health care. It claims we are incompetant to ask for that which is already our right. Mr. Cates may take his right-to-life philosophy away until he is able to incorporate the woman's own right to life therein.
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