Saturday, August 9, 2014

Safety of Abortion Clinics -- Pro-Choicers What Do You Think?

Question for people who are pro-choice -- Do you believe that abortion clinics should be held to the same safety standard as ambulatory facilities? Should abortion clinics be regulated to follow codes such as the Here is a list of facilities across America that are required by law to follow the Life Safety Code standards:  prisons, day care centers, health clinics, hotels, schools, prisons, businesses and homes.  Do you think that abortion clinics should be required to adhere to the same standards?  In Alabama and other states legislatures have proposed or passed legislation that requires the same standards of abortion clinics that are required of other facilities.  Abortion rights activists have claimed that these laws are arbitrary and have nothing to do with safety of facilities for employees and patients. Mary Kate Cary from the U.S. News & World Report notes: 


The Washington Post editorialized recently, "Safety in abortion clinics is a legitimate concern, but these regulations probably will have little effect on patient safety. Many of the requirements are costly and cosmetic, requiring clinics – without financial assistance from the state – to widen hallways, doorways and even entrance awnings." So not being able to get a gurney to a woman in trouble is a "cosmetic" problem, not a safety concern? Women's health advocates told the Post that as a result, all but one clinic in North Carolina "would probably close" because of associated costs, all but five clinics in Texas "would probably" close, and at least one clinic in Ohio is "already feeling the pinch." Similar predictions followed the restrictions on Pennsylvania clinics after the Kermit Gosnell verdict; yet news reports show that only five had actually closed, most voluntarily. 
Since these clinics also offer mammograms, cervical cancer screenings, contraception and other preventive services, the reproductive-rights lobby argues that women will lose access to all of these health services because of "cosmetic," "costly" changes required by "extremist" politicians. But if they really were committed to women's health, wouldn't clinics remain open for all other services? Instead, they prefer to threaten an all-or-nothing shutdown of services to all women because they don't want to meet higher standards for just one service. It makes you wonder which is more important to so-called women's health advocates: women's actual health or abortion politics. 
Mainstream public opinion is moving in one direction, toward more restrictions, not fewer – and the left is moving in the other direction. If you ask me, that's extremist. 

Here is a schematic which shows regulations across all states.

3 comments:

Trekkie4Ever said...

Teresa, if some of us had the option, we would close down every single abortion clinic.

However, I digress, yes, they should be under strict medical guidelines.

Anonymous said...

Shut them down.
While that is taking place the should be under strict medical guidelines

Euripides said...

We take more care and responsibility that restaurants are clean, than places where women's lives are in the hands of abortionists. It's a shameful idiocy of liberal dogmas.