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ABORTION (J-K) Being a health care provider means a lot of responsibilities to imply in a patient.

You are acting as the totality of all the human act in having a responsible to the health care of the patient. With that, health care providers must be extra careful to the moral obligation not to endorse abortion to their clients but to make them realize the worth of living of a human- even if it is just an embryo. Health care providers act as one of the most important factor having an obligation to abortion. They can stop it or they can follow to what their patient wants. They must be careful of doing such things because they can be a model and also a teacher to their patients. Specifically, client have the more right to choose in their own decision. But if we are going to GOD in our hearts: what the Church and Bible said, it would be difficult to choose from making the right into wrong. There are lots of moral obligations that you are going to do: buying new clothes for your baby, giving a daily food intake, changing diapers and to stand behind your baby whenever or whnerever he would like to go. These are most of the things that the client will going to do. These are all her obligation as a mother to her child. If we put Church into abortion, then this topic would have an ending. Abortion is really an everlasting topic, these includes the Penalties to those who commit abortionfor them a MURDER. Penalties of Catholic Church is a sin to heaven. Once a mother proceeds to abortion the Church attaches the canonical penalty of excommunication to the crime against life. It would be a heavy punishment that could be given to a person.

Abortion for them is killing a humankind. This is disobeying the 5th commandment of God: Thou shall not kill. In caring for pregnant women, the physician must consider the health of two patients who are biologically linked, yet individually viable. Although most pregnant women willingly accept some risk to their own health in order to optimize fetal outcome, occasionally women refuse treatment recommended for their fetus. When a pregnant woman refuses medical therapy which could be life-saving for her fetus, complicated ethical issues arise. It is always connected to pregnancy and abortion. Although the mechanisms by which the fetal allograft escapes rejection are still poorly understood, abundant evidence has accumulated suggesting multiple roles for major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes in pregnancy. Specific maternal MHC genotypes and maternalfetal histocompatibility have been associated with recurrent spontaneous abortion, decreased fecundity, segregation distortions, altered sex ratios, fetal growth rates, and maternal autoimmune disease progression. In this review, the evidence for a variety of MHC gene effects in human pregnancy is considered. The carrier of a fetus has the power to choose whether or not to abort the fetus. However, suppose if, at some point in fetal development a fetus becomes a human being, this argument cannot be used. A person does not have the right to do whatever is necessary to retain control over the use of their body. It would be wrong to kill another human in order to do so. However, Professor Judith Thomson argues that even if a fetus is determined to be human, the carrier has the right to abort whether or not her life is at risk. A portion of Thomson's claim is correct in that 'BABY' has no

obligation to give 'MOTHER' use of her body or house or money and 'MOTHER' has no right, even to save his life, to anything 'BABY' has. In turn, a fetus created in a lab has no right to any woman's body. The other portion of Thomson's claim is irrelevant due to the fact that 'MOTHER' must kill 'BABY' to retain sole possession of her body. Thus, if a fetus is a human being, the duty of carrying it cannot be used as a justification for destroying it. Fetal humanity must now be questioned. Some say a fetus is a human being from conception, while others state that it only becomes human at birth. The fairer way for it it to give the wellness to both sides: Mother and fetus. With advanced development, it is being pursed. Thus, health care providers especially the nurse, must put emphasis to the health of both sides. In order to have a wellness to the mother and child, it is really important that they must cooperate to the health care providers in submitting treatments to their fetus. With these, new development can arouse the interest of the technologys powerfor a bette life. It can be done by doing this fetal surgery. Fetal surgery allows doctors to treat certain abnormalities of the fetus that might otherwise be fatal or cause significant problems if permitted to progress. A fetus' ability to re-grow tissue is far greater than an infant's. If you can get the ventricle to grow in the womb, then you could be talking about a child born with a normal heart. Myelomeningocele. Also called spina bifida, myelomeningocele is a condition in which the spine fails to close properly during early fetal development. The spinal cord may protrude or be exposed through an opening in the lower back. Paralysis, neurological problems, bowel and bladder problems, and hydrocephalus (fluid buildup in

the brain) may result. Myelomeningocele affects one out of every 1,000 babies born in the United States. Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH). In babies with CDH, the diaphragm (the thin muscle that separates the chest from the abdomen) doesn't develop properly. The abdominal organs may enter the chest cavity through a hole (hernia) and cause pulmonary hyperplasia (underdeveloped lungs). CDH occurs in about one out of every 2,000 births. Urinary tract obstruction. The urethra (the tube that carries urine from the bladder to the outside of the body) may become obstructed in utero or fail to develop normally. When this happens, urine can back up into the kidneys and destroy tissue or cause the bladder to become enlarged. The amount of amniotic fluid also decreases because fetal urine is its major component. Pulmonary hypoplasia usually results because the lungs rely on amniotic fluid in their development. Congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation of the lung (CCAM). CCAM is a large mass of malformed lung tissue that does not function properly. As a result of its large size, it may put pressure on the heart and lead to heart failure. Lung development is also affected, and pulmonary hyperplasia may result. Twin/twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS). In some twin pregnancies, the two fetuses will share a placenta. TTTS occurs in approximately 15% of these twins when blood volume between the fetuses is unequal, causing abnormally low blood volume in the donor twin and abnormally high blood volume in the "recipient" twin. There is often a large difference in size between the twins. Approximately 7080% of fetuses suffering from TTTS will die without intervention.

Sacrococcygeal teratoma (SCT). This usually benign fetal tumor develops at the base of the spine (coccyx) and affects approximately one in 35,000 to 40,000 newborns in the United States. The tumor may become very large (sometimes as large as the fetus) and filled with blood vessels, causing stress on the heart. It took for the Catholic Church to disapproved this new development. With these, health care providers for them have the mmost quality service that they can give to the clients in this particular undertaking. Once you cxarried out a human embryo: respect the life and integrity of it and do not invloved disproportionate risks for it but to heal one condition and assiting her to its survival.

(-- http://www.surgeryencyclopedia.com/Ce-Fi/Fetal-Surgery.html#ixzz1QsoRYKGO)

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