The Cause and Possible Cure for the Physician Made Abortion Epidemic

Medical Cure for Abortion Epidemic

Philip Ney MD 22/12/11

Pioneer Publishing.
I Policies.
A. Evidence based medicine criteria (as here stated) must apply equally to all medical, surgical and psychiatric treatments.
B. Quality control committees at 2 levels. I) Composed of 7 reputable physicians will examine hard cases. ii) 3 physicians (OB/Gyn, Pathologist, Psychiatrist) rotating biannually will initially assess all abortions. After 4 years, randomly chosen 1:4 cases of abortion.
C. Boards of Licensing bodies must be comprised of only those who will enforce these policies. 1. Let go all physicians who believe in women's right to abortion.
2. Future board members must declare on applying for selection or election, their orientation regarding "reproductive rights".
D. All measures to control practice and correct physicians will apply immediately.
E. Aborting physicians have a 2 year period of grace in which they may voluntarily apologize to those who were aborted unnecessarily and negotiate compensation or risk suits and criminal charges.
F. Physicians who unnecessarily aborted women cannot be protected by their colleagues from charges of criminal assault or criminal neglect.
G. A special prosecutor will be appointed to bring appropriate charges to errant aborting physicians.
H. Abortions can only be done by specially trained Ob/Gyn physicians.
I. Abortions will be provided only as required, beneficial treatment and not as a woman's right.

II Criteria for Evidence Based Medicine.
A. Necessity. An abortion will be considered unnecessary if:
1.) Other methods of treating the medical or surgical conditions have been attempted first and found to be ineffective.
2.) The body of scientific literature pertaining to any given condition indicates other reasonable treatments were available at the time the abortion was done.
3.) The prospective patient must individually fit the recognized criteria for necessity and have a condition that agrees with those recognized as requiring abortion to become well.
4. Avoiding some medical, surgical or psychiatric condition will not meet the criteria of necessity.
B. Benefit.
1. The patient must by healthier, followed up at: 1 mo, 6mo, 1yr., 2yrs, 5yrs, 10yrs. directly attributable to the abortion.
2. The patient must be able to attribute her improvement to the abortion.
3. Benefits are established only by the best evidence available and bare scrutiny by the world wide recognized scientists who have no declared pro-abortion or women's rights bias.
4. The benefits must be measurable, directly attributable to the abortion and sustained for 5 years.
5. Benefits must be demonstrated in the individual and for her group by those who perform or support the performance of abortions.

C. Harms.
1. Harms may fit criteria in 4 groups: a) Medical: eg. increased BP, weight loss
b) Surgical eg. breast cancer
c) Psychiatric eg. depression, difficulty bonding
d) Social. Eg. divorce, domestic violence.
2. Harms must be significantly less than benefits if both occur.
3. The patient may demonstrate harm with the assessment of her family physician or independent specialist.
4. Harms must be disproved by those who perform or support the performance of abortions.

D. Assessment and Recommendation.
1. Assessment for a possible abortion must be standardized.
2. The assessment must include determining the patient's physical, mental and social status
3. A completed assessment must be recorded on a standard form.
4. The form must be read to the patient and time for questions must be provided.
5. The patient and spouse must sign the form as have been done and understood.
6. A clear recommendation must be made including the proposed treatments, alternatives, probable benefits and possible hazards described.

E. Alternative treatments which are less invasive and more reversible must be recommended and tried before any abortion can be performed.
1. If the specialized aborting physician is unable or unwilling to provide alternative treatments, he/she must provide a list of potential approved therapists.
2. The alternative treatments must be tried for at least 3 wks.

F. In good faith.
1. The aborting physician must demonstrate that: he/she is well versed in the best scientific literature pertaining to the scientific evidence of abortion outcomes.
2. The AP must have done and continue to do regular, scientifically authenticate follow-up of his/her aborted patients and found the results are statistically good. (p<0.01)
3. The AP must be convinced by his/her reading of the scientific literature and from his/her practice follow-up that he is treating the patient with the best available medicine and anticipates improvement in the long term.
4. The AP must be motivated by a determination to provide the best therapy and not by selfish, political, philosophical or ideological desires.

G. Informed Consent
1.All relevant questions answered.
2. All pertinent conflicts resolved.
3. The preborn person fully seen on Ultra-sound.
4. Parents of minors informed and their consent obtained.
5. All father's of preborn involved in the decision.
6. Adequate time to consider given


III Information and instruction for physicians

A. Required for all family physicians, Ob/Gyn and specialist AP to take and annually update the best clinical information and scientific data regarding abortion for their MoComp.
2. To disseminate thru medical associations the most recent good research on abortions.
3. Publish testimonies of aborted women.

B. To encourage research with funding and publications

IV Aborting Physicians, (AP)
1. Ob/Gyn especially trained to do abortions after specialized assessment which includes investigations into psychological, family and social status using standardized devices and procedures.
2. Must provide fully filled questionnaire on results of examination and fully described justification.
3. Provide an annual report.

V Licensing Bodies eg. College of Physicians and Surgeons.
A. Determining qualifications of AP

B. Correcting misdemeanors
1. Convicted of first offense AP will lose license to abort and will receive reeducation.
2. Convicted of 2nd offense will have license suspended for one year.
3. Convicted of 3rd offense, will lose license to practice any form on medicine.

C. Will encourage peer reporting.
D. Will enforce the use of evidence based medicine evenly for all form of practice.
E. Will cooperate in any police investigation.
F. Will have 2/3rds elected council, ensuring none who run for office are committed to maintaining abortion as a woman's right.

VI Provincial, (state) attorney general.
A. Appoint special prosecutor.
B. Establish laws directed at correcting and prosecuting malpractice, criminal negligence and criminal assault together with the minister of health.
1. Ensure that until and unless it is scientifically established that doing abortions is good practice, that any attempt at doing an abortion is a criminal assault.
C. Provide quick court access for those prosecuting physician for damages as a result of abortion.
D. Direct judges to include in the compensation for damages, the harms appearing in the long term to mental health and social equanimity.

VII Provincial (State) Minister of Health
A. Provide funding only for abortions done by AP.
B. Fund abortion at a rate 1/6th that of caring for a woman for a full pregnancy and delivery.
C. Appoint to the licensing body 1/3rd the members and only those who do not support abortion as a woman's right.

VII Federal Minister of Health.
A. Will provide funding to the provinces only for medical treatments established by evidence base medicine.
B. Insist that abortion is provided if and when in general the practice of abortion is established as being good for women.
C. Insist that the onus of proof lies upon those who perform or support induced abortions.
D. Provide funding for research that is given objectively or when the quality research appears to be even, to those who are promoting life.
E. Reiterate that all people have a right to good treatment not reproductive rights.


Summary
From ancient time, medicine has recognized the great temptations that physicians are exposed to, the temptations of power, money and taking advantage of patients. Hippocrates and his Greek colleagues recognized that if physicians were to practice with the confidence and trust of their patients they would have to place a absolute, sworn to, prohibition on falling for these temptations.
For 23 centuries physicians swore by the Hippocratic Oath and patients gradually learned to trust them. Then physicians became arrogant and decided they did not need this inconvenient oath. At the same time they began practicing with increasing frequencies the very behaviours that Hippocrates wanted to prohibit. They did so with increasing impunity. God either is blind, doesn't care what we do or doesn't exist.
Modern physicians were soon terminating at least 1/3 rd of all pregnancies and killing the preborn infant. They were able to rationalize their murders as good for everyone including the preborn child. Soon the world of narcissistic people were amplify these arguments to support their convenience. Then some physicians stole the opportunity to demonstrate their power over life and death and make a fortune in the process.
All of this was predictable. The honor and effectiveness of medicine quickly waned. Society complained that medical costs required too great a percentage of their taxes, besides there were many other "professionals" who could do as good a job. Arrogant physicians disregarded their basic mandates and society abrogated its responsibility to keep doctors honest and ethical. The results of this combination were disastrous.
Since physicians refused to regulate their clinical behaviours, society must. And must do it soon.