2018 ABORTION ACT

ANALYSIS AND COMMENT


The Life Institute has produced an analysis of the Abortion Bill as it now reads, which explains the scope and effect of the legislation and also reports on some of what happened at the Special Health Committee looking at the bill. Please take time to read through the report below and use it to take action on calling your TDs

   

The 2018 Abortion Bill – Analysis and Comment 

   

Introduction 

The euphemistically titled Health (Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy) Act 2018 has been signed into law. 

Thank you to the 15 heroic TD's who voted against Simon Harris's disgusting abortion legislation

Sean Canney, IND, Galway East
Michael Collins, IND, Cork South West
Michael Fitzmaurice, IND, Roscommon/Leitrim
Peter Fitzpatrick, IND, Louth
Noel Grealish, IND, Galway West
Michael Healy Rae, IND, Kerry
Danny Healy Rae, IND, Kerry
Michael Lowry, IND, Tipperary
Mattie McGrath, IND, Tipperary
Carol Nolan, IND, Offaly
Peadar Tóibín, IND, Meath West
Mary Butler, FF, Waterford
Eamon O Cuiv, FF, Galway West
John McGuinness, FF, Carlow/Killkenny
Marc MacSharry, FF, Sligo/Leitrim

You can see the official record here: https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates/vote/dail/32/2018-12-05/186/?highlight%5B0%5D=termination

In the Seanad, just 5 principled Senators voted No:
Rónan Mullen (IND), Brian Ó Dómhnaill (FF), Terry Leyden (FF), John O’Mahony (FG) and Diarmuid Wilson (FF).
https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates/debate/seanad/2018-12-13/4/

(See Appendix for full list of those who voted Yes, No and Abstained). 

   

STATED PURPOSE OF THE ACT 


The Act can be found here on the Oireactas Website:
https://data.oireachtas.ie/ie/oireachtas/bill/2018/105/eng/ver_b/b105b18d.pdf

The Act states that this shall be “an Act to provide for and regulate termination of pregnancy” and “to make available without charge certain services to women for the purpose of termination of pregnancy in accordance with this Act. 

In short, it’s an Act to legalise taxpayer-funded abortion. 

DEFINITIONS are included in Part 1, Section 2 of the Act 

The most revealing definition in this section states that: “termination of pregnancy, in relation to a pregnant woman, means a medical procedure which is intended to end the life of a foetus. “It is spelled out in black and white – the bill legalises procedures to end the life of an unborn human child. It also describes a “foetus” as an “embryo or a foetus during the period of time commencing after implantation in the uterus of a woman and ending on the complete emergence of the foetus from the body of the woman”. This definition is clearly designed to allow for the late-term abortions permitted in Section 13 (below).  

Viability is defined as “the point in a pregnancy at which, in the reasonable opinion of a medical practitioner, the foetus is capable of survival outside the uterus without extraordinary life-sustaining measures.” The bill does not say what ‘extraordinary life-saving measures are, and the definition is in marked contrast to that produced by the Royal College of Obstetricians in 2014 which stated that “viability may be defined as the quality or state of being able to live independently, grow and develop”.  


PART 2 OF THE ACT IS TITLED ‘TERMINATION OF PREGNANCY’. 


PART 2, SECTION 9 – ABORTION TO 6 MONTHS ON GROUNDS OF RISK TO LIFE OR HEALTH 

Section 11 of the Bill states that a baby can be aborted until viability (6 months) where there is a risk to the life, or of serious harm to the health, of the woman.
The risk of ‘serious harm’ to health is not defined, and is open to interpretation. 
Health means both physical and mental health.
 

From the Act – Section 9: Risk to life or health

9. (1)  A termination of pregnancy may be carried out in accordance with this section where
2 medical practitioners, having examined the pregnant woman, are of the reasonable opinion formed in good faith that —

(a) there is a risk to the life, or of serious harm to the health, of the pregnant woman,

(b) the foetus has not reached viability, and

(c) it is appropriate to carry out the termination of pregnancy in order to avert the risk referred to in paragraph (a).

 

(2) Of the 2 medical practitioners referred to in subsection (1)—

(a) one shall be an obstetrician, and

(b) the other shall be an appropriate medical practitioner.

(3) A termination of pregnancy shall not be carried out under this section unless each of  the medical practitioners referred to in subsection (1) has certified his or her opinion as to the matters referred to in that subsection.

PART 2, SECTION 10 – ABORTION UP TO BIRTH IN AN EMERGENCY  


This section of the Act allows for abortion without term limits where the risk to life or health is immediate.
Previously, doctors were free under the 8th amendment to induce baby and end the pregnancy where there was a risk to the life of the mother, in cases of severe pre-eclampsia for example.
The Act allows abortion until birth where a doctor is of the opinion that there is a risk of serious harm to the health of the mother.
The risk of ‘serious harm’ to health is not defined, and is open to interpretation. 
Health means both physical and mental health.

From the Act - Section 10: Risk to life or health in emergency

10. (1) Notwithstanding the generality of section 9, or any determination made or pending pursuant to section 16 of an application under section 13(2), a termination of pregnancy may be carried out in accordance with this section by a medical practitioner where, having examined the pregnant woman, he or she is of the reasonable opinion formed in good faith that—

 (a) there is an immediate risk to the life, or of serious harm to the health, of the pregnant woman, and

(b) it is immediately necessary to carry out the termination of pregnancy in order to avert that risk.

   

PART 2, SECTION 11 – ABORTION TO BIRTH WHERE BABY HAS A LIFE-LIMITING CONDITION 


Abortion is permitted without term limits – up to birth – where the baby has a condition which might mean he or she will not live for at least 28 days after birth. 

This reach of this section of the Act has been extended since the referendum. The first draft of the legislation (in Head 6) stated that abortion was permissible where “there is present a condition that is likely to lead to the death of the foetus either before birth or shortly after birth.

Clearly, the amendment to the draft bill was to make sure that abortion was permitted in as many cases as possible once a diagnosis of a life-limiting condition was made. It has already been established in the medical literature (BJOG, 2012) that doctors can say with certainty how long a baby will live after birth, but the Act allows a doctor to make that judgment based on a ‘reasonable opinion’. 

Most disturbingly, the Act does not include an obligation for pain relief in late-term abortions, although it is undisputed that unborn babies feel pain in the third trimester. 

The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists recommends feticide for abortions after 21 weeks + 6 days, and specify that potassium chloride should be injected into the heart of the preborn child to ensure demise. The legal execution of adult prisoners in the United States also uses an injection of potassium chloride, a method which can cause such pain and suffering that both an anaesthetic and a paralytic are administered prior to the dose of potassium chloride, according to a recent article in the Washington Post. 

The Health Committee – including Fianna Fáil TDs, Stephen Donnelly and Margaret Murphy-O’Mahoney –  and the Dáil voted against an amendment which included an obligation to give pain relief for babies enduring such late-term abortions.
 

From the Bill – Section 11: Condition likely to lead to death of foetus

11. (1) A termination of pregnancy may be carried out in accordance with this section where 2 medical practitioners, having examined the pregnant woman, are of the reasonable opinion formed in good faith that there is present a condition affecting the foetus that is likely to lead to the death of the foetus either before, or within 28 days of, birth.

(2) Of the 2 medical practitioners referred to in subsection (1)—

(a) one shall be an obstetrician, and

(b) the other shall be a medical practitioner of a relevant specialty.

 

 

PART 2, SECTION 12: ABORTION ON DEMAND TO 12 WEEKS 
Section 14 of the Act permits abortion for any reason to the twelfth week of pregnancy.
An amendment which would give women the option of seeing an ultrasound or of receiving factual information as to the development of her baby was rejected by the Health Committee and the Dáil.

 

From the Act – Section 12: Early pregnancy

14. (1) A termination of pregnancy may be carried out in accordance with this section by a medical practitioner where, having examined the pregnant woman, he or she is of the reasonable opinion formed in good faith that the pregnancy concerned has not exceeded 12 weeks of pregnancy.

Subsection 4 states that:
(4) For the purposes of this section, “12 weeks of pregnancy” shall be construed in accordance with the medical principle that pregnancy is generally dated from the first day of a woman’s last menstrual period.

    

PART 3, SECTION 22: CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION 

The Bill seeks to force doctors, nurses, midwives, pharmacists, and other medical professionals, to facilitate abortions. 

Section 24 states that such medical practitioners must refer the pregnant woman for an abortion, an action which many doctors have pointed out, goes against their deeply-held moral and ethical beliefs and which will force them to fail in their duty of care to one of their patients, the unborn child. 

The Health Committee has refused to accept amendments protecting the right of medical professionals to conscientious objection, despite fears that the legislation will drive hundreds of GPs out of that field of medicine at a time when a serious shortage of GPs is a significant threat to accessing healthcare.  

More than 600 GPs have signed a petition calling for an EGM of the Irish College of General Practitioners to uphold the right of doctors not to refer. 

In a National Association of GPs poll of members, 85% of GPs felt abortion should not be routine general practice, while only 20% indicated they would be willing to induce abortion.  The NAGP also said its members overwhelmingly agreed that doctors should not be forced to refer and that doctors who wished to provide abortions should avail of an “opt-in” system. 

Doctors were also critical of the fact that Simon Harris proposes to pay €450 to GPs to carry out an abortion over three visits to the surgery, while GPs currently get paid €250 to provide antenatal care for a woman for the duration of her pregnancy.

Nurses for Life have also gathered more than 350 signatures from nurses and midwives seeking to have their right not to facilitate abortions upheld. 

Simon Harris has refused to meet with doctors and nurses on this issue. Amendments proposed to the Bill at Committee stage were rejected.
Sinn Féin’s Louise O’Reilly stated during the Health Committee debate that doctors should be sanctioned if they would not facilitate abortions.
However, legal experts have said that, following the victory of the Asher’s Bakery freedom of conscience case in the British Supreme  Court, a legal challenge may be required to ensure freedom of conscience is upheld.
 

From the Act  – Section 22, Conscientious objection

22. (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), nothing in this Act shall be construed as obliging any medical practitioner, nurse or midwife to carry out, or to participate in carrying out, a termination of pregnancy in accordance with section 11, 13 or 14 to which he or she has a conscientious objection.

(2) Subsection (1) shall not be construed to affect any duty to participate in a termination of pregnancy in accordance with section 12.

(3) A person who has a conscientious objection referred to in subsection (1) shall, as soon as may be, make such arrangements for the transfer of care of the pregnant woman concerned as may be necessary to enable the woman to avail of the termination of pregnancy concerned.


ALL AMENDMENTS TO THE BILL WERE REJECTED: 


16 pro-life amendments were proposed to the Bill. All were rejected by the Select Committee on Health. The amendments sought to:

  • Ensure pain relief for the baby in late-term abortions Outlaw abortion on disability grounds Outlaw abortion on the grounds of gender
  • Ensure aborted babies remains were dealt with in a humane and dignified fashion
  • Ensure the body parts of aborted babies could not be sold Ensure women had the option of seeing an ultrasound of their baby before undergoing an abortion

  • Ensure that women had access to information on the development of their baby before undergoing an abortion

  • Ensure that the right to conscientious objection was included in legislation Ensure that babies who survived abortion would receive life-saving medical care 

All the amendments were vigorously opposed by the Health Committee members, including Simon Harris who told pro-life TDs from the outset that he would not be accepting any of their amendments. Dáíl Éíreann rejected all of the amendments with TDs such as Kate O’Connell, Louise O’Reilly and Lisa Chambers resorting to vitriolic attacks pro-life TDs.
 

How they voted

https://thelifeinstitute.net/how-the-politicians-voted-in-2018