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Targeting
Down Syndrome Children for Abortion
by
Deborah Sturm, RN
I had
mixed feelings when I read a New York Times article
in March that seemed to give a positive face to the disabled
by focusing on adults with Down syndrome who have achieved
and maintained independence.[1] Knowing that this particular
newspaper had been no friend of the pro-life movement, I wondered
what the Old Gray Lady would be willing to report about Down
syndrome babies being selectively targeted for abortion. Little
did I know that this article came on the heels of the National
Down syndrome Society’s published response to the recent
recommendations of the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists (ACOG) that all pregnant women be screened for
Down syndrome.[2]
The
Problem of Dependency
A New
York Times article in January reported on the ACOG’s
recommendations, quoting obstetrician Dr. James Goldberg,
who said, “losing a normal pregnancy secondary to the
procedure [amniocentesis] is not as problematic as the birth
of a Down syndrome child”[3] No doubt his comment and
the ACOG’s stance is horribly offensive to the Down
syndrome community, their families, and many others. As Charles
and Donna James write, “Down syndrome people . . . have
an utter abhorrence of the destruction of their community.”[4]
What is particularly “problematic,” as Dr. Goldberg
put it, about Down syndrome, or other disabilities for that
matter?
It is
no coincidence that The New York Times specifically
focused on the issue of independence when covering the issue
of Down syndrome. Unfortunately, our society is growing increasingly
intolerant of individuals perceived to be “burdensome,”
who have the potential to require more physical assistance—and
oftentimes more health care resources—than others. These
persons include the disabled, the debilitated—such as
those who are comatose or deemed to be “vegetative”—and
the elderly, particularly those who have Alzheimer’s
disease or other types of dementia.
The targeting
of the preborn for genetic defects such as Down syndrome is
merely symptomatic of our next step as a society toward a
culture of death. We are moving dangerously closer to the
utopian “transhumanist” ideology that desires
perfect human beings who are free of genetic defects and impervious
to disease.[5] Aware of developed countries’ technological
advances in genetic engineering, as well as their obsessive
search for perfect children, Pope Benedict XVI recently condemned
modernity’s eugenic quest for “designer babies,”
which includes the screening of the preborn for defects.[6]
A
“Fashionable” Trend
A recent
visit to a gynecologist’s office gave a glimpse of how
and why the selective targeting of disabled preborn babies
for abortion could be so widespread. Information regarding
genetic testing and multiple-marker screening of the preborn—such
as that provided by Magee-Women’s Hospital’s department
of genetics—has apparently been widely disseminated.
This brochure specifically mentions Down syndrome as a birth
defect commonly screened. As Susan W. Enouen points out, “Most
health care providers tend to assume that if a woman consents
to prenatal screening or diagnosis, she is willing to discuss
abortion as an option.”[7] And apparently, aborting
preborn persons who have been diagnosed with Down syndrome
has become quite fashionable. Recent United States surveys
indicate that when it is diagnosed prenatally, 84–91
percent of these preborn persons are killed by abortion.[8]
Further
complicating the issue, some of the tests that are employed
to screen mothers for Down syndrome babies yield false-positive
results. For example, the Triple Screen test, commonly used
to screen for Down syndrome during the fifteenth to twentieth
week of pregnancy, has a 6.5 percent initial positive rate.
This means that 6.5 percent of tests will yield a false positive
result indicating Down syndrome. Given the overall statistical
chance of carrying a Down syndrome child, only one-tenth of
one percent, the Triple Screen test will yield a very high
percentage of false positive results. This means many uninformed
pregnant women will choose to abort a perfectly normal baby.[9]
Widespread
Prejudice
The prejudice
against Down syndrome persons is nothing new and extends to
human life beyond the womb. Nancy Valko, who has been a registered
nurse since the 1960s, admits that in 1973 she thought the
pro-life movement was absurd in predicting that the legalization
of abortion would lead to an increasing acceptance of euthanasia
and infanticide. She describes having a “wake-up call”
in 1982 when the parents of Baby Doe in Bloomington, Indiana,
were engaged in a legal battle to let their newborn child
with Down syndrome die rather than choose a routine surgery
to fix his esophagus. She says that newspaper editorials and
letters to the editor were generally supportive of the parents’
“right” to choose or not choose treatment for
Baby Doe. After nearly a week, the baby died after being denied
food and fluids while his case was being appealed. It was
at that point, Valko says, that she “understood what
the pro-lifers meant in 1973.”[10]
Ironically,
shortly after the death of Baby Doe, Valko gave birth to her
own Down syndrome child, Karen, who had a heart defect. Valko
and her husband advocated for Karen to receive the best medical
care possible. But they encountered resistance and bias in
the medical community. One cardiologist offered to support
Valko and her husband if they just let Karen die, and a surgeon
was overheard questioning the wisdom of providing treatment
to “mongoloids.” A pediatrician whom Valko trusted
even made Karen a “do not resuscitate” without
her mother’s consent because he believed Valko “was
too emotionally involved with that retarded baby.” Later,
when Karen was apparently dying of pneumonia, a young resident
physician wanted to pull her tubes to hasten her death. Misguided
individuals who attended Karen’s funeral attempted to
console the Valko family by saying, “At least it wasn’t
one of your normal children.”[11]
The
Danger of Neutrality
In the
past 25 years many advances have been made in the assistance
and treatment of children with disabilities, especially those
with Down syndrome. Their life expectancy has more than doubled,
rising from 25 to 56.[12] Yet the ACOG’s insistence
that women be screened for Down syndrome suggests that they
cannot relinquish their bias or their support of the barbaric
practice of selective abortion.
What does
a woman face, Enouen asks, when she finds out her preborn
child has Down syndrome? Many doctors may believe it is advantageous
for the woman to have an abortion as soon as possible to avoid
the medical risk to the mother if she has a late-term abortion.[13]
No doubt doctors are also afraid they might face litigation
one day from a mother who has a child with a severe birth
defect. They may have the same prejudices as the physicians
mentioned above whom Valko had the misfortune of encountering.
Furthermore, many women choose abortion because of their perception
that a disabled child will be “burdensome.” A
Harvard study, Enouen points out, indicates that women “felt
that their doctors did not explain Down syndrome adequately
and in a balanced fashion.”[14]
All of
this is compounded by the fact that some of the largest Down
syndrome-related organizations have “abdicated any responsibility
for reducing abortions of babies with birth defects.”[15]
The March of Dimes and the National Down Syndrome Congress,
for example, have adopted a “neutral” stance on
abortion, “ostensibly because they don’t want
to judge or to tell anyone what to do.”[16]
“Neutrality,”
however, can have devastating consequences. The Oregon Medical
Association’s failure to oppose physician-assisted suicide—they
initially took a “neutral” stance—helped
to usher in the legalization of physician-assisted suicide
in that state over a decade ago. “Neutrality,”
then, does not lead to neutral public policies.
Furthermore,
even despite its proclaimed “neutral” stance,
it is clear through the reports of the March of Dimes that
abortion is still a strategic part of their plan to reduce
the number of birth defects. For this reason, Enouen says
that pro-lifers should not lend their financial support to
this organization and should continue to boycott it.[17]
The National
Down Syndrome Society’s resolution in response to the
ACOG’s recent recommendation that all pregnant women
be offered screening for Down syndrome includes two call-to-action
points:
Challenging
and strongly encouraging healthcare professionals and organizations
like ACOG to partner with NDSS and other Down syndrome organizations
to ensure the wide-spread proliferation of balanced, accurate
and up-to-date information to expectant parents; and urging
health care professionals, policymakers, and the Down syndrome
community to work together to ensure that expectant parents
are not unduly influenced to undergo prenatal testing or
to terminate a pregnancy after receiving a prenatal diagnosis
of Down syndrome.[18]
Love
Worth Fighting For
Thousands
of babies could be saved if the aforementioned disability
support groups would boldly oppose aborting preborn persons
with Down syndrome and other disabilities instead of painstakingly
hiding behind a truly non-existent “neutrality.”
Physicians, especially obstetricians, should be on the front
line of the culture war providing accurate written information
about Down syndrome. Hospitals and health care personnel should
help families network with local Down syndrome support organizations
that are invested in giving a positive face to Down syndrome.
Pro-lifers should support pro-life alternatives to the March
of Dimes, such as The Michael Fund (www.michaelfund.org),
whose mission includes stemming and reversing “the growing
tide of eugenic abortion of affected preborn children and
the euthanasia murder of handicapped children and adults in
the United States and abroad.” Women should be afforded
the opportunity to meet with parents of Down syndrome children.
Families
like Charles and Donna James attest to how the presence of
their Down syndrome child, Christian, has transformed their
family in a very powerful and positive way. They say Christian
created in his siblings “a kind of love rarely seen
in children—a mature self-sacrificing love.” They
focus not on his independence, or lack thereof, but instead
celebrate his inherent dignity and worth. Christian makes
their family more “Christian” than they could
have ever possibly imagined as they experience “an indescribable
love for him, and especially from him.”[19]
Deborah
Sturm is a registered nurse and a graduate of Franciscan University
of Steubenville. She currently serves as the vice president
of the Beaver County Chapter of the Pennsylvanians for Human
Life and as the secretary of the National Association of Pro-Life
Nurses. She is a member of St. Peter Catholic Church in Steubenville,
Ohio.
[1] Michael
Winerip, “They’ll Do It Themselves, Thanks,”
New York Times, March 11, 2007, available from http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/11/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/11RCover.html?page
wanted=print.
[2] Roni Rabin, “Screen All Pregnancies for Down Syndrome,
Doctors Say,” New York Times, January 9, 2007, available
from
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/09/health/09preg.html?ei=5088&en=4c6ae0e
2d0261bff&ex=1325998800&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&pagewanted=print.
[3] Nancy Guilfoy Valko, “The War Against Children with
Disabilities,” Voices Online Edition, vol. 22, no. 1,
Eastertide 2007, available from http://www.wf-f.org/07-1-Valko.html.
[4] Charles and Donna James, “Why Do We Murder Down
Syndrome Babies? American Genocide,” New Oxford Review,
February 2007, available from http://www.newoxfordreview.org/article.jsp?did=0207-james.
(Article purchase required.)
[5] Stephen Cave and Friederike von Tiesenhausen Cave, “The
Most Dangerous Idea on Earth?” Financial Times, May
28, 2005, available from
http://search.ft.com/ftArticle?queryText=“The+Most+Dangerous+Idea+on+Earth%
3F”+&y=8&aje=true&x=10&id=050528001142&ct=0&nclick_check=1.
[6] Reuters, “Pope Speaks Out Against ‘Designer
Babies,’” The New Zealand Herald, February 25,
2007, available from http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10425684.
[7] Susan W. Enouen, “Down Syndrome and Abortion,”
Life Issues Connector, January 2007, p. 4.
[8] Ibid., p. 4.
[9] James, “Why Do We Murder Down Syndrome Babies? American
Genocide.”
[10] Valko, “The War Against Children with Disabilities.”
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Enouen, “Down Syndrome and Abortion,” p.
4.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Ibid.
[16] Ibid.
[17] Susan W. Enouen, “March of Dimes Update,”
Life Issues Connector, July 2006, p. 4.
[18] National Down Syndrome Society, “National Down
Syndrome Society Responds to American College of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists’ New Recommendations for Prenatal
Testing,” available from
http://www.ndss.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2004&Itemid=233.
[19] James, “Why Do We Murder Down Syndrome Babies?
American Genocide.”
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