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	<title>Human Life International South Africa &#187; frank muller</title>
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		<title>Warning: Abortions can be hazardous to your health</title>
		<link>http://www.hli.co.za/newsarticles/warning-abortions-can-be-hazardous-to-your-health/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Feb 2010 11:44:42 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[News and Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[abortion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[abortion in south africa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[frank muller]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[human life international]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Frank Muller Abortion remains an emotive issue, not least because it affects our very definition of life.  But, leaving aside the emotionally charged ethical and moral issues for a while, let&#8217;s take a pragmatic approach.  The common perception is that abortions can be done either for profit (as by the private sector and by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Frank Muller<br />
Abortion remains an emotive issue, not least because it affects our very<br />
definition of life.  But, leaving aside the emotionally charged ethical and<br />
moral issues for a while, let&#8217;s take a pragmatic approach.  The common<br />
perception is that abortions can be done either for profit (as by the<br />
private sector and by backstreet abortionists) or not (as by state<br />
institutions and a few philanthropists). However, a third reality has<br />
emerged in South Africa (and indeed worldwide) for which no law makes<br />
adequate provision: the two-stage abortion.</p>
<p><span id="more-16"></span>What is a two-stage abortion?  Many, if not most South African abortions<br />
nowadays are initiated by misoprostil (Cytotec®).  This is a prescription<br />
medication registered for the prevention of peptic ulcers and normally costs<br />
less than R4 a pill.  Misoprostil has the side effect of inducing labour<br />
(and therefore is contraindicated in pregnancy).  Please note:  the drug<br />
does not normally kill the baby; it merely expels the child (often still<br />
kicking) from the womb.  It has come to my attention that the drug is<br />
provided at high cost by GPs, pharmacists (often without prescription) and<br />
by backstreet abortionists to pregnant women desperate for a discreet and<br />
quick solution to their crisis pregnancy. I have heard quotes for two<br />
tablets of misoprostil ranging from R250 to R1000.</p>
<p>The pill provider typically tells the woman how to use the pills and advises<br />
her to visit a state clinic if bleeding persists after the baby is ejected<br />
(and presumably flushed down the toilet).  The pill provider then pockets<br />
the profit.  But that is not the end of the business in many cases.  The<br />
woman takes the drug, thinking it will be a discreet, one-stop solution to<br />
her dilemma.  After all, she avoids going to the state clinic because of<br />
privacy concerns.  And she goes to extraordinary lengths to get the money<br />
together. But when the bleeding doesn&#8217;t stop, she has no choice but to enter<br />
the second stage of the two-stage abortion.  She reports to a state facility<br />
with a &#8220;miscarriage&#8221; and has to undergo an emergency evacuation in theatre<br />
under general anaesthesia.  This involves her being admitted to hospital and<br />
taken to theatre, where remnants of the pregnancy (such as the placenta) are<br />
removed.  She would often have to stay in hospital for a day or two.  If she<br />
waited for a long time for the bleeding to stop, she most likely requires a<br />
blood transfusion at R1,000 per pint as well. All this on the state budget.</p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230;misoprostil-induced &#8220;backstreet&#8221; abortion is not confined to a few cases<br />
but has become a fully fledged industry.&#8221;</p>
<p>The problem is that the misoprostil-induced &#8220;backstreet&#8221; abortion is not<br />
confined to a few cases but has become a fully fledged industry. And the<br />
victims are clogging up limited theatre space in state institutions.<br />
Logically the increase in two-stage abortions translates into more women<br />
needing theatre time for evacuations of their wombs. The problem is that,<br />
since 1997, when abortion was first legalised, theatre capacity at state<br />
facilities has actually decreased (staff shortages being a main reason). The<br />
express purpose of the Abortion Amendment Act was to broaden the<br />
availability and accessibility of abortion services to the general public.<br />
So now we are seeing an even greater demand for increasingly limited theatre<br />
space &#8211; which leads to patient backlogs.</p>
<p>More serious than patient backlogs, however, is the following scenario,<br />
playing itself out in rural hospitals in particular.  One of the Millennium<br />
Development Goals&#8217; indicators is the maternal mortality rate &#8211; the number of<br />
women who die during or shortly after childbirth. The goal is to reduce this<br />
indicator by three quarters by 2015. But this rate has actually been<br />
increasing (not dropping), from an average 128 per 100000 births in a 2000<br />
research estimate to 147 per 100000 in a StatsSA report from 2004 (with some<br />
provinces reaching a whopping 364 per 100000).  All of this is conveniently<br />
blamed on Aids, but things are not quite so simple on the ground. It is my<br />
contention that two-stage abortions are a significant cause of the increase<br />
in the maternal mortality rate. Let me give a real-life example.  Some time<br />
ago, under conditions of anonymity, doctors from a hospital in the<br />
KwaZulu-Natal Midlands revealed to me that five mothers &#8211; not those<br />
undergoing abortions, but those in bona fide labour &#8211; died in a 10-day<br />
period at their hospital. For that period, for that hospital, these five<br />
women represented a horrific maternal mortality rate of about 1,250 per<br />
100,000.  During that same period, about 50 women required theatre time for<br />
evacuations.  Most of those needing evacuations confirmed to my colleagues<br />
that they had indeed used misoprostil to induce their abortions. In total<br />
they required about 40 pints of blood to resuscitate and as a group, these<br />
50 women took up some 50 hours of theatre time (an average theatre only<br />
operates 40 hours a week).</p>
<p>As a result, women with complications during childbirth could not access<br />
theatre, but had to wait while the emergency evacuations were taking place.<br />
Five mothers died. This is not an isolated incident. Similar scenes are<br />
repeated in one state hospital after another in the rural areas. Wherever<br />
you go, you find that critical staff shortages are made far worse by<br />
abortion overloading. Clearly legalised abortion will be with us for a long<br />
time to come.  But steps need to be taken now already to prevent two-stage<br />
abortions from killing more South African mothers. Mothers should not be<br />
dying in order to &#8220;liberate women&#8221;.</p>
<p>Dr Frank Muller is a medical doctor, pharmacologist and medicinal plant<br />
expert with extensive links to rural African hospitals.  He is a director of<br />
the Christian Medical Fellowship of South Africa.</p>
<p>References:<br />
Maternal mortality rate for 2000:<br />
<a href="http://www.ijgo.org/article/PIIS0020729200002666/abstract" target="_blank">http://www.ijgo.org/article/PIIS0020729200002666/abstract</a></p>
<p>Maternal mortality rate for 2004:<br />
<a href="http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId" target="_blank">http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId</a></p>
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