Fayetteville Women's Clinic
William Harrison M.D.
1011 N. College, Fayetteville, Arkansas
(479) 442-8166
WHY I PROVIDE ABORTIONS
I provide abortions for my patients
and for any other girl or woman who feels this her best option after
making what is, for most women and their families, a soul searing self-examination
before arriving at the decision to abort a pregnancy.
Why would I or any other reputable physician provide abortions? Good
question.
First the long answer.
In 1964, I was admitted to medical school on the day that our second
child was born. I sat with my wife through her labor and at the last
minute they took her into the delivery room where our son was born.
My mother and father, her mother, my sister and about half dozen friends
were at the hospital with us. All came into her room a few minutes after
delivery. There was such a tremendous feeling of love and goodwill in
that room that I decided then and there that if I were granted the opportunity,
I was going to become an Obstetrician.
I started medical school in the fall of 1964 at age twenty-nine, the
father of two wonderful children, the husband of a wonderful wife, and
the happiest man in the world.
But a large part of this answer began years before the night I decided
to become an Obstetrician. I had grown up in a small town, the son of
small town teachers. We were Methodists but we went to whichever of
the two churches (they alternated services) was open on a particular
day for worship, Sunday School, MYF, BTU, prayer meeting or revival;
the Baptist or the Methodist, it didn't matter...we were there! My father
was the Sunday School superintendent (at the Methodist church) and my
mother played the piano at both churches. Obviously we were well churched.
We were also poor as church mice since my parents had five children
on a very limited income.
I had no concept that I would ever be able to go to medical school when
I was young, and when we started in 1964, I had no idea how we were
going to be able to finish. But my mother always said to me, "the
Lord has a special purpose for your life." (I suspect that she
told all her children that.) The longer I live, even though I am not
a particularly superstitious man, the more I have come to believe that
to be true for each of us - if we make it happen.
By 1967 I was a third year medical student, still with no visible means
of support, and we were pregnant with our third child. It was the spring
of that year and I was ending my rotation in the Ob-Gyn Service clinic.
I was assigned a 40 plus year old, poverty stricken mother of several
children. I think she was unmarried but I am not sure of that now. This
care worn mother-of-several had a large abdominal mass that I rapidly
determined to be a well advanced pregnancy. I asked my resident to come
and break the news to this woman; it was very obvious to me that she
was not going to be happy about the news of another pregnancy. When
told that she - already unable to adequately feed and clothe her family
- was again pregnant, she looked up at me and the resident. There we
stood, two white males, well clothed, well feed young men with superior
educations. We were, in her eyes, stunningly blessed and obviously going
places in the world. She began to weep silently. She must have assumed,
for good reason, that there was no way that we would understand her
problems; she knew also that there was nothing that we could or would
do to relieve her lacerating misery.
"Oh God, doctor," she said quietly, "I was hoping it
was cancer."
That mother's anguished whisper eventually became a shriek of despair
and hopelessness that has reverberated in my heart and mind and soul
for over thirty years. Before that moment, forever seared like a brand
on my memory, I would have described myself as "Pro-Life"
had I then known this political term .
Over the next few years, I was exposed to real life as it is lived by
millions of people who don't have the sanctification granted in America
to those who are white, male, well educated, well gene-ed, well nurtured,
well advantaged. I learned that what this woman knew was a personal
tragedy for herself and her family, was only one face in a multifaceted
problem confronting thousands of girls and women every day.
How did I learn this?
I learned it - really made it a part of my essential being - by seeing
the repercussions of desperation walk, and crawl, and be carried through
our emergency room door three, four, five times, every night for four
years. Each night we would admit to the wards of University Hospital
in Little Rock (a fairly small hospital, as metropolitan hospitals go)
girls and women with raging fevers, extraordinary uterine and pelvic
infections, enormous blood loss, and a multitude of serious injuries
of the pelvic and intra-abdominal organs as a result of illegal and
self-induced abortions. During the years 1970 through the end of my
residency in June, 1972 we did in the same hospital perhaps twenty to
thirty safe, legal abortions a month on girls and women of various ages
for mostly elective reasons. The contrast between the outcomes for these
two sets of women was dramatic, not only for what happened to them immediately
- that is, the almost total lack of complications in those undergoing
legal abortions and the terrible consequences of some of the illegal
abortions that we saw - but also for what happened over the next few
years to those who had illegal abortions as they discovered that they
were sterile, or faced total hysterectomy for the effects of injuries
suffered during their illegal procedures.
I could and sometimes do go on for hours about what I saw during those
years of training and in early private practice, before abortion became
universally legal and affordable in the first few months of pregnancy
for any woman who determined, for a myriad of reasons, that carrying
a pregnancy to term and delivering a baby was not in her best interest.
Or perhaps not in the best interests of her family. (The very poor in
those early days of legal abortion were covered by Medicaid.)
But what of the concern for, as a ninth grader expressed it, "someone
who is often forgotten, the little life who doesn't even have a chance
to live."
No one, neither the patient receiving an abortion, nor the person doing
the abortion, is ever, at anytime, unaware that they are ending a life.
We just don't believe that a developing embryo or fetus, whose mother
cannot or will not accept it, has the same moral claims on us, claims
to autonomy and justice, that an adolescent or adult woman has. I have
never seen an abortion decision entered into lightly by anyone involved.
The decision to have an abortion is most often made in the time of the
first great personal moral crisis that ever faces a girl, a woman, her
family and the people who love them. It is only those who stand outside
and condemn the women and families who are faced with these dilemmas
who take lightly the decisions made in these straits and trivialize
the circumstances in which they are made.
Moral dilemmas are always about difficult problems. Decisions between
right and wrong are not moral dilemmas; decisions between right and
wrong should be no-brainers and should never be difficult.
It is in deciding between what we consider morally near-equal alternatives
that we are forced to make agonizing appraisals. The decision between
competing evils or competing goods - these are the judgments that may
burn in your mind and live forever in your memory, that fry your soul.
And it matters not whether one believes elective abortion a good or
an evil, for every abortion decision is made between self-perceived
competing goods or competing evils, not between obvious good and self-evident
evil.
Is legal abortion dangerous? I personally have not seen an abortion
injury to a woman since 1974, with three exceptions: One was a young
women who became sterile after a post legal-abortion infection in 1974
in my practice; another was a woman from my practice who had a ruptured
uterus in about 1975 as the result of an abortion done in Little Rock
at about twenty-four weeks by a resident using a no-longer-used method
of abortion. (Since I wrote this several years ago, I have had another
patient with an abortion related injury in July, 2003. Apparently, as
I was dilating the cervix so that I might remove the fetus and placenta
in an 18 year old, I perforated her uterus. It turned out that no significant
harm was done, but I felt obligated to evaluate her pelvic and intra-abdominal
organs with the laproscope under general anesthesia before sending her
home.)
The other exception was a mother of five whom I admitted to my hospital
in about 1991 with a septic abortion at about twenty-six weeks pregnant.
She or someone else had obviously tried to abort her. The fetus was
alive, but the fetal membranes were ruptured and blood from the uterus
was mixed with a stinking pus, fouling her body, her clothes, and her
bedclothes. (She was the sickest obstetric patient I had seen in a number
of years, and the sickest abortion patient I had seen since June 1,
1971.) She had a fever of about 104 on admission and exhibited signs
of impending septic shock. We got her stabilized and loaded her with
massive doses of antibiotics. She was lucky. We were able to induce
labor, deliver the extremely premature and septic fetus that died almost
immediately, and she went home in about three days. Arkansas Medicaid
did not cover her abortion, but it did pay part of the bill for her
recovery from one, which was well over ten times the cost of a safe
first trimester abortion.
I know of only two deaths from legal abortions in the state of Arkansas
since 1970. One was in about 1980 or 1981, a young woman from Springdale
with severe heart disease who died as a result of complications of her
heart disease, who had the abortion done by another physician at my
hospital where she died in the recovery room, before she was to go to
Houston for open heart surgery; the other was probably a patient of
Dr Bernard Nathanson, an early abortion provider in New York state and
maker of The Silent Scream. This was a doctor's daughter from Northeast
Arkansas who died after she came home, in about 1970 or 1971, as a result
of self-neglected complications of an abortion that Dr. Nathanson may
have performed in New York. The girl came home, started having serious
problems and died rather than tell her parents of the abortion. It was
only discovered at autopsy, and her story was then told by a friend.
There may have been others; if so, I am not aware of them.
There are risks to any medical procedure; however, legal abortion, done
by competent medical personnel is among the safest operative procedures
performed today in the United States. From 1972 through 1990, there
were 563 deaths from abortions of all types - legal, illegal and spontaneous
- in the U.S.; fewer than half that number were from legal abortions.
In 1990, there were in the United States a total of 5 women who died
from legal abortions and another 5 from spontaneous abortions.*
*{Taken from the Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report (MMWR) published
by the Center for Disease Control. New editions of the MMWR covering
abortion usually come out in May of each year. It takes several years
to collect reasonably accurate statistics about abortion deaths, since
each death report must be thoroughly reviewed before the CDC publishes
their data in order to make sure that the most reliable numbers are
available for making public health policies. The numbers through 1991
will be published in May, 1997.}
I mentioned earlier that my mother always said to me, "the Lord
has a special purpose for your life," and that the older I get,
the more I think she may have been right; not just for my life, but
for all of us. (But we have to find that purpose ourselves.) We each
have unique skills, talents and abilities to be used in the service
of our fellow human beings. What I mean by this is, that I was led into
OB-Gyn by my love for delivering babies. Gynecology was really to be
only an appendage to my obstetrical practice and I am sure that providing
abortions, even thinking about abortions, would never have been a major
part of my life had other physicians in my area continued to provide
them as was being done prior to 1984.
However, I soon found my practice inundated with abortion patients because
other physicians who had also been providing abortions stopped doing
so. In late 1983 it suddenly became uncomfortable, and very soon dangerous,
to provide abortions. I literally had no option but to make a "Sophie's
choice" between delivering babies, which I loved, or making what
for me would be an immoral and unethical decision, that is, to choose
to abandon those girls, women and families who started coming to my
office by the dozens. How could I look my children, my wife, my mother
and my friends - myself - in the face and say, "I believe that
abortion should be legal, safe, and available. But now some people disapprove
and it's become very uncomfortable, perhaps even dangerous, to provide
them. And so I am going to stop doing what I know to be absolutely right.
When it gets uncomfortable or dangerous, it's OK to say, `not me, coach.'"
Was that the morality that I wanted to demonstrate to my children? To
parade in front of my wife, my family and friends?
Not me, coach!
Why do I provide abortions?
Here is the short answer.
Like multitudes before me and, I trust, multitudes to come, I eventually
heard (Try as I might to avoid hearing it!) in that mother's grief-filled
declaration, "Oh God, Doctor, I was hoping it was cancer",
a still, small voice asking, "Whom shall I send, and who will go
for us?" to which I was at last compelled to reply, "here
am I, send me."
William F Harrison, MD, FACOG

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