(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, January 30.)
I recently re-read an account of a case in which a baby who
survived an abortion was callously left to die. The story is no less shocking
now than when it happened nearly 30 years ago.
It didn’t happen in China or North Korea or one of those other
countries that we regard as placing a low value on human life. Neither did it
happen in the squalid rooms of a back-street abortionist.
It happened in Southland Hospital and was subsequently held
to be entirely legal. No action was taken against the doctors who presided over
the abortion and decreed that the baby boy should be left to die.
In fact the only person penalised – and this is one of the
most disgraceful aspects of the whole sordid business – was a courageous and
principled paediatrician who was so appalled by what happened that he
complained to the police.
For that breach of professional etiquette, Dr John McArthur
was hauled before the Medical Practitioners Disciplinary Committee and
subsequently found guilty of professional misconduct.
He was pilloried, in effect, for dobbing in two colleagues
whom he sincerely believed had broken the law. He had committed the cardinal
sin of breaching club rules.
What in most decent people’s eyes was an infinitely more offensive
act – the deliberate withholding of treatment from a baby whom expert opinion
held was perfectly capable of surviving – went unpunished.
The story of Dr McArthur’s treatment by the medical and
legal establishments is a shameful saga of moral equivocation and ethical whitewashing.
It’s impossible to read it without having your confidence in the integrity of
official institutions and processes shaken.
It started when Dr McArthur, a paediatrician at Southland
Hospital, returned from a clinic in Queenstown one afternoon in November 1985 to
be told by a concerned nurse that a male baby had been aborted after 25 weeks’
gestation (it later turned out to be 29, or more than seven months) but had
survived the procedure.
He found the infant alone in a back room of the neo-natal
unit, lying unclothed in a cot, covered only by a sheet. “He was cold, blue and
grunting vigorously, fighting for his life,” Dr McArthur later wrote.
No attempt had been made to give the baby warmth, fluids or
oxygen. According to Dr McArthur, the doctor who performed the abortion had
wanted the boy left in the delivery suite until dead.
A fellow paediatrician, asked by Dr McArthur for a second
opinion on whether they should treat the baby, tersely announced that he was
going home.
Dr McArthur took the boy into the intensive care unit, where
his colour and muscle tone improved in response to treatment. But by this time he
was suffering from severe respiratory distress, “greatly aggravated by the
withholding of care”, and died the next morning.
The baby had spina bifida – which was the reason given for
the abortion – and would have been paraplegic had he lived, but Dr McArthur
believed he could have grown up to be of normal intelligence. An expert witness
would later testify that he could have lived to 50.
It’s important to note that Dr McArthur was known for his
opposition to abortion, which wouldn’t have endeared him to all his colleagues
– least of all those who relied on abortion fees for part of their income. But in
this case his personal stance on abortion was incidental; he was simply
observing his professional obligation to save a life.
His subsequent complaint to the police alleged not only that
his colleagues had failed to provide the necessaries of life, but that the
abortion had been illegal in the first place.
Up to 20 weeks’ gestation, a baby can legally be aborted for
foetal abnormality (such as spina bifida); but after that time, the only legal
grounds for abortion are to save the life of the mother or to prevent serious
and permanent injury to her physical or mental health. Dr McArthur claimed this
latter justification was put forward only after the event. (I should make clear
that it appeared the parents – or at least the father – did not want the baby, although
this had no bearing on Dr McArthur’s obligation to save it.)
Space limitations prevent me from recounting in detail the
subsequent proceedings and the legal arguments advanced for and against Dr
McArthur. Suffice it to say that although the Invercargill police investigated
conscientiously, the legal section at police national headquarters performed tortuous
legal contortions in concluding that no offence had been committed – an opinion
later backed, no more convincingly, by the then Solicitor-General.
The coroner kicked for touch too, as did a High Court judge
who held that the child’s life was a matter for the doctors.
The medical establishment appeared less concerned with the
fact that a viable infant had been left to die of neglect – this in a public
hospital – than with chastising Dr McArthur for disregarding the niceties of
professional etiquette. Soon after, he left Southland and took up a position in
Wellington.
He won a longer-term victory in 1993 when the Paediatric
Society, at his instigation, introduced a policy emphasising that where there
was any doubt about a premature baby’s viability, it should be treated. “The
child’s welfare must be the paramount consideration.”
Dr McArthur was further vindicated in 1994 when Parliament
passed a legal amendment making clear that doctors reporting suspected child
abuse enjoyed absolute protection under the law, including from their own
colleagues.
It’s a sad irony that in this case, the alleged abuse –
albeit abuse by neglect – was perpetrated by medical professionals. But such
incidents are an almost inevitable consequence of an abortion regime that encourages
casual disregard for human life. And the
chilling reality is that we don’t how many other similar cases may have gone
unrecorded.
2 comments:
Hi,
I am doing a paper on the history of journalism.
My first child was born in March 3 1986. The thing is she has Spina Bifida. The story u have wrote about had just hit the news at that time.
I remember reading about it except never once was it said what the babies problem was, just that it was 'deformed' but I remember reading articles where it's condition was described as 'grossly deformed'. Nurses in Dunedin thought I knew all about it while we were in the Special Care Baby Unit because we were also from Invercargill, (even had the same pregnancy doctor but the doc never realized my baby had a problem) so they, the nurses, kept asking me questions about the aborted baby with Spina Bifida. This was the only reason I knew what was wrong with it.
Our daughter came home finally after 5 weeks, back to Invercargill and articles about the case kept being printed about a 'grossly deformed' baby until I wrote to the editor and said it was very inaccurate reporting. The baby had Spina Bifida like my daughter and my daughter is certainly not 'grossly deformed'!
Now, I am doing this course and writing an essay about what has changed in printed journalism in regards to fact and fiction so I have spent all afternoon trying to find the newspaper articles.
Do u have any dates of articles about this story, I have found some but they are not the right ones.
If u have any articles or dates of articles would it be possible to tell me???
Any help would be really appreciated!
Thanx
Gayle :)
Gayle Lyn, I'm sorry for not replying to you earlier but I've only now become aware of your comment. If you email me at dufresne@xtra.co.nz I'll give you whatever help I can.
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