There are also obvious logistical problems with fetal personhood bills. An estimated 10 to 20 percent
of known pregnancies end in miscarriages, with the actual number likely
much higher as many women miscarry before they know they are pregnant.
In addition, the risk
of miscarriage is higher for specific groups of women, such as older
women, women with weight problems, women who have already miscarried,
those who have contracted infections or who have immune response issues,
and those who regularly use drugs, including alcohol and nicotine.
As a result,
the implementation of fetal personhood laws would require
unconstitutional discrimination and invasion of privacy. If a fertilized
ovum has the same rights as a person after birth, each miscarriage (or
failure to implant) would need to be scrutinized for intentional or
reckless neglect. Detection would only be possible by registering all
incidents of unprotected sex, and effective surveillance would require
regular pregnancy testing, in particular of women at risk of miscarriage
(think mandatory weekly pregnancy testing for women over 40 until they
reach menopause). Of course, no one is advocating this.
Proponents of
punitive pregnancy-related provisions have, however, successfully
advocated for the growing surveillance of pregnant women from
marginalized or stigmatized communities through social services, and in
particular through medical providers. The organization National Advocates for Pregnant Women
has documented the growing arsenal of state laws that treat drug use
and addiction in pregnant women as a form of child abuse. Because health
care providers in all states
must report child abuse to the authorities, this reframing forces
doctors and nurses to breach patient confidentiality for pregnant women
who admit to struggling with drug use or addiction. The predictable
result is a breakdown in the therapeutic relationship at best, and at
worst, a reluctance to seek care at all for the women who arguably need
it the most.
How To pregnancy Testing.....

Many of these
bills are pushed through without consulting the medical community, which
is the case for the bill currently pending in New Hampshire. House
hearings are under way, and both pediatricians and
obstetric-gynecologists will testify to its predictably disastrous
effects on the provision of addiction treatment and child welfare.
To be sure,
both child abuse and drug addiction are serious matters, which require
appropriate state support. Attempts to redefine drug use or addiction as
child abuse in pregnant women, however, disregard the medical and
psychological needs of both abused children and pregnant women.
Advocates of such legislation are attempting to transform the fiction of
fetal personhood into law by appropriating the problem of child abuse
and punishing pregnant women in need of treatment for substance
dependency or addiction. Ok Showing my next post.
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