Friday, July 21, 2006

Feds are lying to pregnant teens

From Raw Story

A new study released by Congressman Henry Waxman (D-CA) finds that federally-funded pregnancy resource centers often mislead pregnant teens about the medical risks of abortion, RAW STORY has learned.

Investigators, who called into 25 such centers posing as pregnant 17-year-olds, were often told by the centers that abortion leads to breast cancer, infertility, and mental illness.

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According to the report, the centers provided false and misleading information about a link between abortion and breast cancer. Despite what Waxman calls a medical consensus that induced abortion does not cause an increased risk of breast cancer, eight centers told the caller that having an abortion would in fact increase her risk.

One center said that "all abortion causes an increased risk of breast cancer in later years," while another told the caller that an abortion would "affect the milk developing in her breasts" and that the risk of breast cancer increased by as much as 80% following an abortion.

The centers also allegedly provided false and misleading information about the effect of abortion on future fertility. Abortions in the first trimester, using the most common abortion procedure, do not pose an increased risk of infertility. However, seven centers told the caller that having an abortion could hurt her chances of having children in the future. One center said that damage from abortion could lead to "many miscarriages" or to "permanent damage" so "you wouldn't be able to carry," telling the caller that this is "common" and happens "a lot."

What's more, the centers allegedly provided false and misleading information about the mental health effects of abortion. Waxman's office points to research that shows that significant psychological stress after an abortion does occur, but is no more common than after birth. However, thirteen centers told the caller that the psychological effects of abortion are severe, long-lasting, and common. One center said that the suicide rate in the year after an abortion "goes up by seven times." Another center said that post-abortion stress suffered by women having abortions is "much like" that seen in soldiers returning from Vietnam and "is something that anyone who's had an abortion is sure to suffer from."

I'm not saying pregnant teens should be told abortion is a walk in the park, but they're in a vulnerable position, and they should be entitled to honest and truthful medical information.

Suppose the Federal government were telling men that vascectomies lead to an increase in testicular cancer.

Suppose the Feds tell people asking for Prozac that the drug causes strokes.

Suppose that information's false.

Seems to me there's a malpractice issue here.

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