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Do you prefer medical advice from a doctor or a legislator?
On February 1, 2006, the Indiana House passed House Bill 1172. HB 1172, which will be heard in the Senate Health & Provider Services committee on 2/22/06, would amend Indiana’s informed consent to abortion law to require a doctor to inform every pregnant woman in writing:
- life begins at conception
- the fetus may feel pain
- anesthetics are available to fetuses of at least 20 weeks’ gestational age.
A House amendment to allow a health professional to offer her/his own medical judgment of these "facts" was voted down.
Would you prefer your medical advice from a doctor or a legislator?
Legislators who voted for this bill say they did so to reduce the number of abortions in Indiana. In reality, the new requirements place ideology over science, and will not stop abortion. Addtionally, HB 1172 may be amended in the Senate to allow health care providers to refuse to dispense birth control.
Tell your senator to stop the harassment of abortion patients and the attack on contraception. Tell your senator that the only way to reduce the abortion rate is to increase access to birth control and comprehensive sex education.
| Sample Letter for Campaign |
Subject:
Dear [ Decision Maker ] ,
I, your constituent, ask you to vote against HB 1172.
We all share the goal of reducing the abortion rate in Indiana. But this goal can only be acheived by reducing unintended pregnancies. This goal is best achieved through comprehensive sex education, access to contraceptives, and delayed sexual activity.
HB 1172 places politics over science. Despite the lack of expert testimony in the house, this measure was advanced as if it were medical fact. Quite the contrary!
According to the state department of health, roughly 95% of abortions in Indiana happen in the first trimester (before 14 weeks' gestational age), and the latest medical research (Journal of the American Medical Association, 2005) shows that the earliest the fetus might feel pain is 29-30 weeks' gestational age. There is further no evidence of abortion in Indiana at 20 weeks or later, when the bill suggests that anesthesia is available to the fetus.
According to anesthesiologists, there is no medical protocol for providing fetal anesthesia.
Whether or not "life begins at conception" is a personal/religious conviction. It is not for the legislature to dictate.
For the General Assembly to compel doctors to provide false medical information is an embarrassment to our state. To harass women with "junk science" is appalling. To even consider allowing health care providers to refuse to dispense birth control is exactly the wrong thing to do when trying to lower the abortion rate!
Despite efforts to reach a compromise that would have provided appropriate medical information to patients, the majority of house members saw fit to place politics over women's health and safety.
I urge you to vote with science! Vote "no" on HB 1172!
Sincerely,
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