Pro-life counselling made easier
with new, 4-D pics
Paul St. Paul
The Interim
A
new technology, 4-D scanning, is changing pre-natal medicine and bolstering
the argument against abortion.
Years ago, 2-D scanning showed us a flat, black-and-white picture of
the baby in the womb. Then, 3-D scanning was developed, revealing a
more realistic, but motionless, picture of a baby. Now 4-D, the fourth
dimension being time, is showing an unborn child's movements in the
womb. At 12 weeks, the baby is leaping, kicking and stretching, long
before the mother feels these movements. At 18 weeks, the eyes are opening,
something previously thought not to occur until at least 24 weeks. At
26 weeks, just past six months, the baby is scratching, smiling, hiccupping,
crying and sucking.
The positioning of the baby within the womb is also clearer in 4-D
movement, giving the doctors a head start in delivery.
Some have accused 4D imaging of being unnecessary, mere entertainment.
But Stuart Campbell, a British doctor, says otherwise. "The term 'scanning
for entertainment' surely is an insulting one with which to describe
the natural desire of parents to see and know and love their baby before
birth." He gives the parents five minutes alone to be with each other
and their child as seen on the screen.
The show of emotion on the part of the unborn is not only heartwarming
for the couple, but also sobering. The baby is clearly having fun and
enjoying life. Normally, babies do not smile for six weeks after birth,
so the smile on their faces inside the womb is indicative of how comforting
that place must be. Therefore, one can imagine the distress an unborn
child goes through in the abortion process. Natalie Hudson of Toronto
Right to Life says, "It's unfortunate that even in the face of this
incredible technology, pro-aborts still champion a woman's 'right to
choose.' Now, there is no denying the humanity of the unborn, so the
only leg left to stand on is the 'rights' rhetoric of the woman to do
whatever she wants 'with her body.'"
Hudson notes that, "The pro-woman approach that has been adopted by
the pro-life movement of late has become the focus, because the debate
has shifted from proving the humanity of the unborn to debunking the
rights rhetoric."
Though
this technology has been around since late 2001, because of its expense
and limited accessibility, its value was not understood. Now, pro-life
clinics in the U.S. that can hardly afford 2-D ultrasound equipment
are going into debt for the 4-D ultrasound, which costs more than $100,000
(US), because it is convincing women in ways a brochure cannot. And,
since most abortions are committed in the first 13 weeks, six-week ultrasounds
are now being given. Usually, a mother starts bonding with her baby
at 15 weeks when her child starts to kick, but because this activity
is taking place at six weeks, when it can be seen before it is felt,
pro-life choices are being made by women (who would have had an abortion)
once they have been exposed to 4-D pictures of their children.
National Institute of Family and Life Advocates president Tom Glessner,
in a spring 2002 article in At the Centre, writes of clinics that have
success rates of 70 to 98 per cent in convincing woman to choose life.
He also writes that ultrasound and other medical services attract many
more abortion-minded women.
In the same article, Glessner says, "Imagine the impact if 1,000 pregnancy
help centres convert to medical clinic status by the year 2010 and if
each medical clinic sees an average 1,500 abortion-minded women a year.
If we achieve this goal, 1.5 million abortion-minded women each year
will receive life-affirming medical services, such as ultrasound."
Hudson says that the majority of pro-life activity in Canada is in
the area of counselling, not in pro-life medical clinics. One of our
problems is the system of state-run universal healthcare, which includes
pre-natal services. To have a private clinic would raise cries of a
two-tiered system and to have an exclusively pro-life public baby clinic
would be tricky, Hudson concedes.
Nonetheless, the technology will change the debate in Canada, too.
Hudson says, "To attack the (pro-abortion) ideology, you need visuals"
- especially those of one's own child.