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World Unfit to Live?
DOWN CHILDREN IN THE CROSSHAIRS
BY STEVE WEATHERBE REGISTER CORRESPONDENT February 25- March 03, 2007 Issue |
Posted 2/20/07 at 9:00 AM
OTTAWA — A Canadian medical group
has set off a firestorm of protest after recommending “prenatal genetic
screening” for all pregnant women.
Pro-life groups and Catholic
organizations have joined people with Down syndrome and their families in
criticizing the recommendation. They say it is hostile to people with Down in
particular and physically or mentally challenged persons generally.
The Society of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists of Canada is trying to avoid the debate about consequences. Media
Officer Michael Haynes told the Register none of the organization’s
spokespeople “will talk to you because they don’t want to get drawn into the
abortion debate.”
It’s just about screening, according
to the society. Prenatal genetic testing of the mother’s blood (which contains
distinguishable components of the unborn child’s blood) can reveal the
likelihood of “chromosomal anomalies” in a non-invasive way and the absence of these.
That means far fewer of the more definitive, but also more invasive tests using
amniocentesis need be done.
“Having the option to access this
information early in pregnancy means that women and their families have time to
prepare, to collect information, and to receive balanced health counseling
prior to delivery,” stated Dr. Jo-Ann Johnson, a member of the committee that
made the recommendation, in a Feb. 5 news release.
The prenatal screening was already
recommended for women over 35 (because their risk of bearing a child with Down
is higher) as a means of reducing the number of amniocentesis tests done.
The Canadian Down Syndrome Society,
however, launched a pre-emptive strike against the recommendations on Feb. 1
that may have caused the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada
to include in its recommendations the language about “balanced health
counseling.”
The recommendations were expected
because the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
made a nearly identical announcement in early January. The American
doctors, however, made it clear that Down syndrome was the target of the
screening. The Canadian Down Syndrome Society’s early counterattack may also
have led the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada to blur the
intent of its screening by using the term “chromosomal abnormality.”
In response to the American
College’s recommendation, Father Frank Pavone, director of Priests for Life,
noted that Catholics could not condone testing that had the purpose of identifying
prospects for abortion.
“Let’s stand both for
the advancement of the treatment of the unborn, and against
the deadly mentality that pushes to kill the less than perfect,” he said in a
statement.
Toward Eugenics?
The
Canadian Down Syndrome Society was clearly concerned over the use of the
expanded tests. Said its executive director, Krista Flint at a Calgary press
conference: “My children’s children may inherit a world without Canadians with
Down syndrome — and that’s not a good world.”
In
a subsequent interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Flint even
rejected the characterization of Down syndrome as “anomalous.” Down syndrome is
“a naturally occurring chromosomal arrangement that has always been part of the
human family.”
Dale
Froese, an adult with Down syndrome, told the Calgary press conference, “It
hurts to think that one day any group of people might be eliminated from the
human race. People with Down syndrome are doing great things today. Some of us
are married, go to university, have important jobs and have family and friends
who depend on us.”
The
Canadian Down Syndrome Society’s concern is that positive test results will be
delivered with a negative spin by doctors. The concern is based on hard
experience, according to Flint.
“Our
constituents tell us that still many families are told, ‘Don’t have this baby.
It will ruin your life,’ or, ‘it will never be toilet-trained,’” she said.
“That’s not information, that’s a bias.”
The
Catholic Organization for Life and Family called the Society of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists of Canada recommendations “a disturbing step towards
eugenics.” The organization’s chairman, Bishop Ronald Fabbro of London,
Ontario, told the Register that it doesn’t doubt that “the main purpose of the
prenatal testing was to give an option of abortion to the parents.”
Bishop
Fabbro noted that the Church in Canada had opposed eugenics during its heyday
when, influenced by early feminist groups and the medical profession, several
provincial governments instituted sterilization of those classed as mentally
defective. Forced sterilizations continued until the early 1970s.
Dr.
Will Johnston, head of Physicians for Life, said that “eugenics is not
officially approved because of the disasters of the last 100 years,” but also
sees the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommendations as a move
in that direction. It is ironic, he told the Register, that in Canada it is not
yet acceptable to call explicitly for the abortion of babies because they are
defective, “while we give official approval for aborting babies for no reason
at all.” Johnston is referring to the de facto Canadian legal position on
abortion: that it is strictly a matter of the pregnant woman’s choice.
Social Disapproval
Johnston
said that as prenatal testing becomes more sophisticated, the “choice” will
broaden. “People will ask, ‘Do you really want a child who is not quite as
bright as you would like?’“
He
said the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists is “insincere when it says
it has no position on abortion. Prenatal testing is a way to mark the child for
destruction.”
Moreover,
he said, such testing will not only increase pressure on parents to abort Down
syndrome children and other children, it will encourage social disapproval of
parents who decide to have such children, since, after all, they were given the
option to abort and chose to ignore it, thus adding to the burden on them and
society.
Johnston
also noted the medical flaw in prenatal genetic screening: It produces “false
positives” in 8% to 10% of the results. These in turn lead to amniocentesis,
which leads to miscarriages in one in 175 cases.
“This
testing is supposed to provide peace of mind,” he said. “But imagine the misery
of the women who lose healthy babies because of the tests themselves.”
Steve Weatherbe is based in
Victoria, British Columbia.
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