Talk:Abortion: Difference between revisions

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→‎Fetal Pain: Susan Faludi, etc.
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::I see the point that the subject of "fetal pain" probably belongs under another section -- it is more an ethical issue than a health issue. Although there is a such thing as "the health of the fetus," that's not the context here, and the pain felt by a fetus during dismemberment isn't really a "health consideration." [[User:LotR|LotR]] ([[User talk:LotR|talk]]) 15:36, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
::I see the point that the subject of "fetal pain" probably belongs under another section -- it is more an ethical issue than a health issue. Although there is a such thing as "the health of the fetus," that's not the context here, and the pain felt by a fetus during dismemberment isn't really a "health consideration." [[User:LotR|LotR]] ([[User talk:LotR|talk]]) 15:36, 19 December 2007 (UTC)

:::I agree that fetal pain during abortion is not really a "health consideration" as much as it is part of a description of what is aborted. This article contains virtually no information about what is aborted, also called the [http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/abortus "abortus"] (defined broadly as the "product or products of an abortion"). So, I would suggest creating a separate section titled "The abortus." I probably won't have time to contribute to editing this article in the near future, but I hope to be able to chime in here at the talk page every now and then.

:::If a section ''is'' created regarding the abortus, there could appropriately be a section on fetal pain. Also, I hope that some thought will be given to including a non-shock image of a typical fetus ''before'' it is aborted, so that the image is ''not'' a shock image. Susan Faludi, in her book "The Undeclared War Against American Women" (1991) [http://bigtimegrownupstuff76.blogspot.com/2006_06_01_archive.html said]: "The antiabortion iconography in the last decade featured the fetus but never the mother." In contrast, the present article now features iconography of the mother but not of the fetus, and I think this situation needs some balancing.[[User:Ferrylodge|Ferrylodge]] ([[User talk:Ferrylodge|talk]]) 18:02, 19 December 2007 (UTC)


==Breast cancer link==
==Breast cancer link==

Revision as of 18:02, 19 December 2007

Good articleAbortion has been listed as one of the Natural sciences good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
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December 26, 2006Good article nomineeListed

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Notable precedents in discussion

"troubled teens and [troubled] young adults" or "young adults and troubled teens"?

This has to do with the NZ study in the PAS section. I couldn't tell from either the statement or the abstract. Also, I do not see where you get this info from the article. Can you please provide a quote here?LCP 22:36, 25 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Also, I could not find support in the cited refs for, "The New Zealand researchers admitted to not asking subjects if they had previous psychiatric illnesses, and further complicating the study, admit that women must claim psychiatric or physical illness in order to have an abortion in New Zealand." Were they interrogated? To whom did they do the "admitting"?

Also, although in a journal, the first cited source of criticism of the study comes from "Dr Ellie Lee is a ... co-ordinator of Pro-Choice Forum." How is this not POV???LCP 22:59, 25 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Also, the "Journal" in which Dr Ellie Lee's comments were published, "Abortion Review", is published by bpas, "The laading provider of abortion services in the U.K."LCP 00:43, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Merged. Just a quick note to anyone else who stumbles upon this and is a little confused (like I was): this might be solved for now per the thread directly below (i.e., Fresh start - revamp of "Mental Health" section). There was a subsequent revision to the article that removed the text in concern, though be sure to double check the current version of the page in order to see if that is/isn't the case, as things might change in the meantime. Cheers =) --slakrtalk / 09:43, 28 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Section retitle

The title of the "Heath effects" section was recently retitled to "Risks and side effects." I realize that there has been some discussion about this above, however, I feel that the change disregards the consensus set almost two years ago in November 2005 (see Archive 13, "mental health section drop off"). The section was formerly titled "Health risks," but was altered to "Heath effects," in order to accommodate the possibility of positive effects related to mental health. The title "Risks and side effects" is a step back in terms of inclusivity as it does not reflect the full scope of the "Mental health" sub-section. I will thus retitle it to "Health considerations" in the hope of addressing some of the concerns over the ambiguity of the word "effects" expressed above. -Severa 14:02, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Fresh start - revamp of "Mental Health" section

With all do respect to the work you've done on the Abortion page, Severa, I believe this particular section needs a fresh look and a overhaul. Undo weight is certainly put on PAS and depression. I agree that the section is too long. But the way to proceed is to write fresh paragraph that is more balanced.

Andrew C had a very good suggestion - we should put the negative and positive mental health effects in context. The following is Andrew C's paragraph with some minor modifications I have made:

The effect induced abortion has on mental health has been studied by the medical community with studies resulting in various conclusions.[1] (reference is to specific page that talks about preponderance of medical evidence) Most researchers have found that there has not been a causal relationship between abortion and depression or stress. Some researchers have found that abortion has a positive mental impact, while others have found abortion has negative effects on women. A handful of studies have proposed a psychological syndrome, sometimes called "post-abortion syndrome" or "abortion trauma syndrome", although the APA does not recognize this syndrome and convened a panel that rejected the existence of the syndrome.

What do others think? --IronAngelAlice 16:58, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

This is all criticism and no helpful suggestions, sorry - and I'll be back later to try to be more helpful. First scan impression:
  1. First sentence is too long and meandering, and lacks flow (studied... with studies? Um, no. Various conclusions? again no, try differing results perhaps?)
  2. Studies don't propose. Ever.
  3. Last sentence suffers from the same run-on syndrome as the first, sorry.
  4. Spell out APA.
Again, I realize this is brief and all critcisms, if my brain were in copy-edit mode I'd be a more helpful and positive, rather than a list of problems - apologies! It is an excellent start, and I don't mean to rain on your effort as badly as it looks. KillerChihuahua?!? 17:23, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Two more suggestions: From what I recall (Yes I'm going off memory right now) studies showed that other factors were highly, some said exclusively, affective concerning whether a woman experienced negative effects post-abortion. Secondly, what about neutral effects? That seems to have been omitted. Btw, feel free to simply edit your rewrite above below, as no one else has commented. KillerChihuahua?!? 17:38, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Revamp per KC's suggestions

The effect induced abortion has on mental health has been studied by the medical community. Most researchers have found that there is no causal relationship between abortion and depression or stress.[2] (reference is to specific page that talks about preponderance of medical evidence) Studies have been conducted in several countries and cultures with varying research methods. As a result, some researchers have concluded that abortion has negative effects on women,[3] [4] while other researchers have found abortion has a neutral or positive impact on women.[5] [6] [7] [8] It has also been suggested that an individual woman's stress level after receiving an abortion is influenced by her economic status, family situation, the status of her mental health before the pregnancy, and the culture within which she lives.[9] A handful of studies have suggested that some women who have an abortion suffer from a psychological syndrome, sometimes called "post-abortion syndrome" or "abortion trauma syndrome." The American Psychological Association does not recognize this syndrome and convened a panel that rejected the existence of the syndrome.

--IronAngelAlice 17:28, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]


I am ok with I prefer the current version on the page. And I respect Severa’s arguments. The current version has less editorial content. It is more facts based. And I prefer that. However, if other editors feel the text above is an improvement, here are my misgivings.
  • Is it more accurate to say, “Most researchers have found that there is no causal relationship…” or “Most researchers have not found a causal relationship…”? I tend to think the first version makes a statement that is too strong granted the limitations of science.
  • “Studies have been conducted in several countries and cultures with varying research methods. As a result, some…” implies that only research methods (as opposed to the actual fact of the matter) determined the findings that abortion can have a negative emotional effects. Implicit or explicit, this is an interpretation, and interpretations are original research. Whether this is true or not is not for us to suggest. To me, this statement looks like an attempt to editorialize about study results. And that is against the rules.
  • After my little temper tantrum about the POV article from “Abortion Review” (published by “the leading abortion provider in the UK”), I trust that all of the sources will be as close to NPOV as possible. I like research studies in peer reviewed journals best.LCP 21:10, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Revamp per LCP's suggestions

The effect induced abortion has on mental health has been studied by the medical community. Most research has not found a causal relationship between abortion and depression or stress.[10] (reference is to specific page that talks about preponderance of medical evidence) other Most research suggests abortion has a neutral or positive impact on women's mental health.[5] [6] [7] [8]. However, other research has concluded that abortion has negative effects on women's mental health[11] [12] Some research also suggests that an individual woman's stress level after receiving an abortion is influenced by her economic status, family situation, the status of her mental health before the pregnancy, and the culture within which she lives.[9] A handful of studies have suggested that some women who have an abortion suffer from a psychological syndrome, sometimes called "post-abortion syndrome" or "abortion trauma syndrome." The American Psychological Association does not recognize this syndrome and convened a panel that rejected the existence of the syndrome.

(I struck the term "other" and replaced it with "most" so that the third sentence is parallel with the second sentence. I also reverted the order so that the paragraph is more clear.)

--IronAngelAlice 21:52, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Anymore comments/suggestions/problems? If no one objects, I'd like to replace the current paragraph either tomorrow or the next day. --IronAngelAlice 21:57, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • Is the following a true statement: “Most research suggests abortion has a positive impact on women's mental health”. Because that is one of the things the paragraph says. If it is not supported by the citations, it could be corrected by breaking out positive effects and neutral effects into separate sentences.
  • Tense is prolematic. At one point you use “suggests” (present tense); At another point you use “suggested” (past tense). This could imply that one study is current and the other is passé.
  • In general I think the use of “suggests” is too interpretive and weasely, too weak in both cases. I think in both places “conclude” would be a better alternative. That, after all, is the language in the research itself, yes?
As the risk of sounding like a patronizing ass (which I may very well be), I think IronAngelAlice is doing a fine job crafting this paragraph and getting consensus. However, I still prefer the current version as I prefer directly quoted content to summary. If anyone else agrees, now might be a good time to speak up.LCP 22:43, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Hi LCP. The language in the third paragraph is supported by the citation in the second paragraph. My reason for changing "some" to "most" was for stylistic reasons - so that the third sentence flows from the second sentence. Nevertheless, let me try to accommodate your concerns. Also, I will change "suggests" to concludes" where it is relevant. However, with the Norwegian and Finnish studies, "suggests" is a better term. Last, I understand that you prefer the current paragraph. However, lots of people have suggested that what is currently written is disjointed and presents no context. I hope more people will give input.

Re-revamp per LCP's suggestions

The effect induced abortion has on mental health has been studied by the medical community. Most research has not found a causal relationship between abortion and depression or stress.[13] (reference is to specific page that talks about preponderance of medical evidence) other Many scientific studies have concluded abortion has a neutral or positive impact on women's mental health.[5] [6] [7] [8]. However, some research has concluded that abortion has negative effects on women's mental health[14] [15] Norwegian and Finnish researchers have suggested that an individual woman's stress level after receiving an abortion is influenced by her economic status, family situation, the status of her mental health before the pregnancy, and the culture within which she lives.[9] A handful of studies have concluded that some women who have an abortion suffer from a psychological syndrome, sometimes called "post-abortion syndrome" or "abortion trauma syndrome." The American Psychological Association does not recognize this syndrome and convened a panel that rejected the existence of the syndrome.

--IronAngelAlice 23:20, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I do find it hard to believe that “Many scientific studies have concluded abortion has a positive impact on women's mental health”, but that statement would be easy enough to verify once I can get to the ref, and if it is slightly off, it would be easy enough to correct. Thanks for inviting me to participate and taking my observations into consideration. Nice work. LCP 23:32, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for all the feedback. We've drafted a good paragraph considering the bulk of the information for this section should be contained in separate pages that deal with PAS or mental health after abortion. If there are no further objects, I will replace the current section with the above paragraph. --IronAngelAlice 22:23, 27 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seems okay. At cursory inspection, my primary concern is with the following unreferenced sentence: A handful of studies have concluded that some women who have an abortion suffer from a psychological syndrome, sometimes called "post-abortion syndrome" or "abortion trauma syndrome." Aside from that, good job so far =). --slakrtalk / 09:31, 28 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Back to the drawing board

The long-standing version of the "Mental health" sub-section is a lot more even-handed than the version which was recently inserted into the article. It weighed the evidence on all sides — positive, negative, and neutral — while still managing to remain both cohesive and concise. The proposed version is a step back, in that it does not really touch upon the subject in much depth, being composed mainly of short, conclusive statements. I think that this is most emphasized by the italicized "not" in the second sentence. I don't think we can achieve any balance through such truncated coverage or afford potential readers an understanding of the topic by brushing it over.

If there are unresolved problems with the long-standing text, then let's try to work around what we already have, instead of trying to reinvent the wheel. The main issue at hand appears to be that the "Mental health" section doesn't present the information that the conclusion of most in the scientific community is that there is no causal relationship between elective abortion and poor mental health. This could be easily addressed in a similar fashion as is done in the "Breast cancer" sub-section. All that would be needed would be a single sentence stating what the current scientific consensus is, and, perhaps, another stating that the PAS/abortion-mental health issue is sometimes perceived as being more political than scientific in nature. This solution worked in the "Breast cancer" sub-section, so it could definitely be made to work in the "Mental health" sub-section, too.

I think we should concentrate on writing these two sentences, which can be worked into the existing structure, rather than trying to rewrite it all from scratch. The section has been re-written from the ground up many times in the past two years, and it would be nice for it to have some long-term stability, as that's one of the requirements of a Featured Article. I'd like to see this article achieve FA status one day, and, if Atheism, Global warming, and Intelligent design can serve as any indication, then that's not something that is out of reach for an article on a polarizing topic. There's a lot left unfinished on the to-do list, but, I think we can still improve the article to FA quality if we use our time efficiently. I think we can do this by addressing what needs to be addressed, directly, and avoiding — as the adage goes — "trying to fix what ain't broke." We are never going to have 100% approval from 100% of people when dealing with a topic like abortion, but, if we can get up to 75%, I think we've done our job. -Severa 09:38, 29 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Many of us agree that the older version of the section gives undoe weight to questionable sources. The revised section makes the paragraph far more concise, and is as even handed as possible for such a controversial issue. --Justine4all 16:54, 30 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think we could meet a middle ground. As noted above, I am uncomfortable starting with an introductory paragraph so focused on PAS, when the vast majority of the cited sources don't use that term (and many don't even find validity in those claims). I think we could use a modified version of the latest revision for an introductory paragraph. Then we can use most of the text from the long standing version (sans the offending studies and intro paragraph). Sort of blend the old with the new. I agree with severa that the latest version is TOO concise/dumped down/generalized, but it could work if we used it as an introduction to some of the older stuff which went into a little more detail. -Andrew c [talk] 01:56, 1 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The long-standing version of the "Mental health" sub-section was arrived at through the collaborative effort of many editors, and, as such, the manner in which it has been written takes into account the concerns which some of those contributors have raised. If we gut the section, we are disregarding this past collaboration, and thus it is better to try build upon what we already have. It is possible to accommodate the concerns that Justine4All has raised within the existing structure of the section. This can be done in much the same fashion as was accomplished in the "Breast cancer" sub-section. The paragraph on PAS can also be moved to the end of the "Mental health" sub-section in order to remove the suggestion of primacy over other, medically-recognized conditions. Let's work together to draft a solution like the one employed in "Breast cancer" instead of simply going back and forth between versions. A version which all editors who have worked on this article can live with is a version that is likely to be more stable in the future. -Severa (!!!) 02:35, 1 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Severa, I can understand how you feel some ownership of the material on this page. It's easy to do with controversial pages. However, recently it has become more apparent (with the exposure of Reardon among others) that PAS is given undo weight in this section, along with a minority of studies (the New Zealand study), suggesting there is causal relationship between abortion and depression or poor mental health. It is not analogous, and we should not continue to compare the "mental health" section with the "breast cancer" section. Nor is it appropriate to claim we should not change the section because you would like to see the article be a Featured Article. Instead, we should attempt - as best we can - to present accurate information, and not simply "stable information" that is inaccurate. For this reason, many of us believe we should start fresh with a new section. If you have specific changes to the new, more accurate, Mental Health section, please suggest them here. --IronAngelAlice 16:30, 1 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Severa, I replaced the top paragraph of the "Mental Health" section with the paragraph we crafted here on the talk page. (I left the other paragraphs in place.) You have reverted this change. Forgive me, but I'm confused. Is it that you do not believe that the section should be changed at all (which is what you suggested above), or that you believe what we have written is inaccurate? You suggest we make changes first in the talk page, and I've done that consistently, yet you revert our agreed upon changes. I don't quite understand... --IronAngelAlice 21:47, 1 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I get the distinct impression I am being bullied :( --IronAngelAlice 00:03, 2 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Don't worry, IronAngelAlice, you're not being bullied. Your work is appreciated. I actually applaud the effort put in to trimming some of the fat from that section, as I found some of the old version's word and factoid choices a little awkward at times, considering the section is kind of supposed to give an abstract of Post-abortion syndrome. In any case, the whole changing consensus process can be a little arduous (especially on controversial pages), but I assure you, your boldness is appreciated. =) --slakrtalk / 04:29, 2 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Justine4all and IronAngelAlice have been confirmed as being a single user and thus the above comments should be interpreted as such. As for the "Mental health" section, I've suggested that we write a couple of short, concise sentences, similar to what has been done in the ABC section. I believe that we should work with what we already have, instead of trying to rewrite the section from scratch, which would be counterproductive. Previous efforts at developing the section have concentrated on addressing the many concerns which have been brought up. We should build upon the foundation that's already been laid; there's no need to tear down a whole house simply because one person has found it to have a leaky roof. Perhaps we should start by isolating the particular areas of the section which need to be addressed. It would also be helpful if we established the information currently not present in the "Mental health" section which would need to be added. -Severa (!!!) 12:24, 3 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I second. And to the extent that is it possible, I would suggest that theories are presented in order of due weight. In other words, theories with the most scientific support should be presented at the top of the section. And within the presentation of each theory, ideas and sources should be presented so that those which are most neutral and authoritative are presented first. By “most neutral” I mean least obviously affiliated with a pro-life or pro-choice cause. It would be good to develop a hierarchical guideline of what out ranks what. For example, while a U of Chicago study bears much weight, an article in the NY Times ranks lower than any peer reviewed study. A study of 1,000 people over the course of 20 years published in a peer reviewed journal holds more weight than a study of 10 people over the course of three months (regardless of where it was published, granted it is published in a peer review journal that does not have an obvious or historically pro-life or pro-choice affiliation). The conclusions of any study would bear more weight than either an op-ed in a medical journal or an article in the NT Times. I would also suggest that studies that come from institutions such as the U of Chicago bear more weight than studies published in journals that historically have an obvious pro-life or pro-choice affiliation (such as the Rockefeller Foundation [4] or Guttmacher Institute).
Here is my (uneducated) first stab at how I would rank sources:
1. Major studies published in peer review journals that do not have an obvious or historical pro-life or pro-choice affiliation.
2. Minor studies published in peer review journals that do not have an obvious or historical pro-life or pro-choice affiliation.
3. Any study published in peer review journal that does have an obvious or historical pro-life or pro-choice affiliation—but which, nevertheless, can make a strong claim to being sound science.
4. Research based news articles.
I do not think that there is any room for Op-ed published anywhere. Finally, the thing we have to really avoid is OR commentary in the form pitting one study against another. In other words, we need to avoid the editorial “however.” Let’s just present the facts as coherently and objectively as possible.LCP 17:19, 3 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Does anyone out there have any thoughts about the proposal I made here? Beyond the needs of this page, I wonder if there shouldn’t be a Wiki page for use by all Wikipedia editors. Thoughts? Anyone?LCP 22:23, 31 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Page semi-protection

Royalguard11 unprotected the page stating: Page protected for a while; hopefully protection is no longer necessary. I think by judging by the recent page history, and the controversial aspect of this topic, that this page will always be the target of anon vandals. As WP:PROT says, Indefinite semi-protection may be used for: Articles subject to heavy and continued vandalism, such as George W. Bush, I'd support re-instating semi-protection. But before I am too bold in using my admin tools, I wanted to run it by others to see if there were objections.-Andrew c [talk] 00:16, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, I unprotected the page because it had been protected for over 7 months, and the comment is a pre-programmed string (originally used by VoA, then by Steel). As someone who has been involved in discussions about indefinite s-p, I don't think this really qualifies. If you look through the talk archives, you'll see that there's not really a consensus about indefinite s-p, and even less consensus on the criteria. This page had been basically unprotected from June 06 to January of this year (minus 8 days for an edit war), so I don't think you can say it's been going on for a long time (this last one was rare, a combination of being from the time before expiry dates and after admins stopped checking to make sure protection didn't run too long; I just did a huge run through that night on pages that had been protected for 7 months or more). -Royalguard11(T·R!) 00:31, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Support!. Please semi-protect.LCP 00:25, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I'm just saying that there have been 25 edits since the page was unprotected, however the article hasn't changed at all in that period. 12 of those edits were vandalism by anons, and 11 edits were reversions of those vandals. This is in a 48 hour period. At this rate, we will fill up screen after screen of page histories with this nonsense in just a few weeks. I'm willing to hold off requesting page protection to see if the vandal rate changes, but I'm skeptical that the vandalism will subside to a manageable rate.-Andrew c [talk] 00:43, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

(edit conflict) Support. Looking at the article's history, in the last couple of days, there has been a significant increase in the number of hit-and-run edits. This, ultimately, just spells a lot of mopping-up for the regular editors of this article as well as for the RC patrollers. I do think that the majority of unconstructive edits like "Jacob ROCKS! West Podunk High FOREVER!" are preventable through indefinite semi-protection. -Severa (!!!) 01:01, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comment I would support semi-protection for a period of a few weeks, in order to give the regular contributors a rest and dissuade the casual vandals. Can such things be automated? Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 15:34, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The edit history is nearing a full page consisting almost exclusively of vandalism. Sure, I'm all for trying to make Wikipedia an open, inviting place where anyone is welcome to edit, but this is just open season. I see no benefit to keeping the article unprotected other than to the sort who like inserting things such as a long paragraph full of repetition of the phrase "(copulate) me." -Severa (!!!) 13:44, 5 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

disambiguation?

The Abortion page refers exclusively to the (usually) medical practice of aborting/terminating the human fetus. An "abortion", however, might potentially refer to a number of concepts, practices etc - any thing which has been aborted. I'm not an experienced wikipedian so please forgive me if I have missed something, and I do realise that Wiki is not a 'dictionary' - my comment is not purely about linguistic semantics, but should there not be some form of disambiguation and reference to alternate definitions of Abortion? --Te Irirangi 01:47, 4 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

A link to the Wiktionary entry for "Abortion" is included in the "External links" section of this article. Wikipedia:Disambiguation, the relevant guideline page, advises against listing dictionary definitions on a disambiguation page (e.g., the article badger, which does not disambiguate to "nagging") and also recommends that the most common definition of a term be the one which is returned by a search. I do not think there is sufficient risk of confusion to warrant disambiguating to alternate definitions. I've personally encountered the word "abortion" used in the sense of "the process of stopping" or "something incompletely or imperfectly formed" a lot less than I've encountered it used in the sense of "the termination of a pregnancy." -Severa (!!!) 18:55, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Pro-life van photo

Using the new WatchFlickr tool I found the following image:

Pretty disturbing in my opinion, but interesting nonetheless. Would it have a place on any abortion related article(s)? - RoyBoy 800 00:48, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I think the photo is pretty flawed in that the user didn't have the white balance appropriately set (look how blue the photo is). That may be corrected with photoshop though. I think the place that jumps out to me would be in the pro-life article under the activism section next to the "truth display" paragraph. I'm not sure if it would work here. Under the debate section, we balance the sides of the debate with pretty equivocal images of massive protests. Replacing the pro-life image with this wouldn't work because it would look like one lonely car with no one around it represents the pro-life side, while thousands of people at the Washington Monument represents the pro-choice side. Making this an additional image at this article would shift the visual balance to the pro-life side, and there are also space constraints. All that said, it is a good find, and probably has a place at the pro-life article if not more. But because of the graphic nature, we should request permission on each individual article before hand just to make sure there is consensus for inclusion. -Andrew c [talk] 01:40, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think a single image of an aborted fetus speaks quite eloquently against any number of pro-choice demonstrators. The main problem is that there is nothing in the pro-choice rhetorical arsenal than can match the horror of an image of an aborted fetus, let alone the idea of tens of millions of them left in dumpsters over the past few decades. The thing I find interesting is that in the name of “neutrality”, Wikipedia editors castrate the pro-life argument by denying the presentation of strongest piece of evidence pro-lifers have to demonstrate that abortion is an abomination. Here’s the irony: If the fetus does not have humanity, is just a blob of tissue that just happens to resemble a baby, then presenting images should be of no consequence to those who are pro-choice. The truth should speak for itself. That those who are pro-choice object to images can mean only one of two things. They either secretly fear that the fetuses are human. Or, they are secretly elitist, feeling the need to “protect” the uneducated masses. I propose the second option is the case, especially in light of the fact that abortion’s most notable proponents, such as Margaret Sanger, have also been strong supporters of eugenics. Unfortunately, this elitism is a profound violation of the spirit of Wikipedia and democracy. So I have to ask, who really is being served by the omission of images of fetuses from the abortion pages on Wikipedia? Granted the way abortion is positively correlated with low economic status across the world, who really is being served by abortion?LCP 18:28, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
That is so well said, LCP! Anyone who is honest with themselves knows that the pro-choice faction must be, inwardly, pleased as punch that the ban on "shock images" also "happens" to give a huge boost the relative strength of the pro-choice argument. 71.211.46.128 (talk) 01:38, 15 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I suggest discussing it on Talk:Pro-life. That seems the most obvious and appropriate page. I imagine it should be well-received. Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 20:48, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Do you think it would be safe to just include the image on that page instead of talking about it?LCP 20:51, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Be bold an' all that :-) Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 22:16, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I kindly disagree, as mentioned in my first post above. WP:IUP#Rules_of_thumb #10 Do not place shocking or explicit pictures into an article unless they have been approved by a consensus of editors for that article.-Andrew c [talk] 22:52, 10 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The topic of graphic photos has been raised a lot around here. There is, in fact, a pro-choice analogue to the photos used by the pro-life movement. However, there is a only description of the photograph of Santoro's body at her biographical article — the picture itself is not included. This is basically the same concept with the "Truth display" paragraph in the "Activism" section at Pro-life.

Wikipedia reports the use of graphic photos within the greater context of its coverage of activism for specific causes. The pictures of pro-life and pro-choice demonstrations in this article are intended to illustrate the social movements themselves. Thus, if we have a picture of people at the March for Womens' Lives to illustrate the pro-choice movement, we should logically pair it with a picture of people at a March for Life to illustrate the pro-life movement. The intent isn't to illustrate points which either movement might raise, so, really, there's no need to ensure one image counters or balances another. I imagine this is the reason why Anti-war has pictures of peace signs and anti-war demonstrations and not pictures of, say, civilian casualties of armed conflict. Beyond this, including a photo of an aborted fetus or a woman dead from unsafe abortion would be redundant, because such photos wouldn't convey anything which is not more clearly conveyed by a description of a D&E or mortality figures for unsafe abortion. The purpose such images would serve in this article would really be more argumentative than informative.

The precedent against graphic photos on the top-tier Abortion article works both ways, and, for that reason we don't link to the web sites of either Women on Waves (a Dutch pro-choice organization) or the Center for Bio-Ethical Reform (an American pro-life organization) from here. The use of graphic photos is a complex and very specific facet of the abortion debate, and, quite simply, we do not have the space to open up that can of worms here at Abortion. In addition to the ethical debate, we also have to try to summarize the medical, historical, statistical, and legal aspects of abortion. I would say that there is more of a case to be made for the inclusion of the pro-life van photo at Pro-life. This is where the information pertaining to the use of graphic photos within the pro-life movement is located. -Severa (!!!) 05:27, 11 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I have been party to a couple of the debates, and I don’t intend to reopen the debate to include images at this point. I understand what you are saying and think what you are saying is generally sensible. In the past, however, I would have opted for including the most graphic of images from both sides of the debate. I would have said that abortion is inexorably tied in with basic human issues such as the right to life and the right to self-sovereignty, and without images the article fails to conveys that. Now, however, I am starting to think that perhaps it is better for the article to read like a Chilton’s auto manual. In a world in which discussions about abortion are usually highly polemic, Wikipedia provides the reader a place where some attempt has been made to deal with the subject dispassionately. On the other hand, I wonder if abortion, like the Holocaust, should ever be discussed dispassionately. I wonder if attempting to do so isn’t simply just monstrous from the perspective of both women’s rights and the human right to life.LCP 16:26, 11 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I would say that the only way to use the photo is to include the caption (right down to "...Karma's a bitch.") Just kidding. But really, the images on the van are shocking, for the sake of being shocking. They have no edifying value. And the context of the photo? I would argue along the lines as Andrew that it could be seen as a POV violation because it characterizes the PL movement as sensational extremists (like the Genocide Awareness Project). I'm quite confident that the majority of people who oppose abortion aren't using Eric Rudolph as a rallying point. Even as someone who is pro-choice, I find the implication that pro-lifers in general support anti-abortion violence to be extremely troubling, not to mention flat out false. Perhaps this would be more appropriate for the Abortion-related violence page.
I'd also like to point out that some comments are moving away from discussion of the page, leaning toward debate of the subject, itself. The fact that some PLs use visual shock tactics as their main weapon has little to do with WP policies and consensus on the inclusion of an image on the parent page of abortion. General speculation on other editors' motivations for objecting to an image are not appropriate for the talk page, particularly when there are a number of noted legit. reasons and a pre-existing consensus that such images should not be included (judging by the specific mention at the top of the page). Phyesalis (talk) 01:02, 25 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Quote I'd like to add to debate section

This is new from Noam Chomsky and I think it beautifully sums things up, which is why I think it belongs here rather than elsewhere:

"You're not going to get the answers from holy texts. You're not going to the answers from biologists," he says. "These are matters of human concern."[5]

Any thoughts?LCP 22:21, 11 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It's not clear what he means by "these". I don't see why this should be added. Photouploaded 14:40, 12 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe I'm not so quick on the draw, but I am having a hard time understanding what exactly Chomsky is trying to say here. I'm also concerned that someone who is quite liberal politically and a controversial figure because of it is going to be the face of moderation and common ground. I think there needs to be more context regarding the quote, and also I'm concerned that Chomsky isn't a notable figure in the abortion debate, so why should his opinion matter. Hope this isn't too harsh, but this is just what concerned me on first glance.-Andrew c [talk] 14:57, 12 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Not too harsh at all. Chomsky is a great social commentator with a reputation for thinking outside of the box. When I read the quote, it resonated with me intuitively as it speaks to both sides of the issue. That C is not deeply involved in the debate helps as he can make claims to being a dispassionate observer. I'll take another look at the article in which the quote appears to see if I can't speak more clearly to your concerns.LCP 18:36, 12 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

There is a second half to the quote: "There are conflicting values and taken in isolation each of these values is quite legitimate," he adds. "Choice is legitimate, preserving life is legitimate." You can read it in context in the article: [6]. Again, I think the quote provides an excellent intro to the section and summation of the debate. I don't see that it has pro-life or pro-choice bias.

There is also a good quote by Alan Dershowitz, Professor of Law at Harvard: "Everybody is right when it comes to the issue of abortion."LCP 22:24, 16 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Here’s the quote I would include in its entirety: "You're not going to get the answers from holy texts. You're not going to the answers from biologists. These are matters of human concern. There are conflicting values and taken in isolation each of these values is quite legitimate. Choice is legitimate, preserving life is legitimate." Any thoughts out there on the Dershowitz quote?LCP 22:27, 16 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
There's a lot of very notable quotations about abortion, such as Mother Theresa's "It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish",[7] or Florynce Kennedy's "If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament".[8] However, this is a top-tier article, and the "Abortion debate" section is essentially intended to serve as a summary of the articles Abortion debate, Pro-life, and Pro-choice. I thus do not think we have the space to include full quotations in this article. Quotations would be more appropriately added to a sub-article like Abortion debate or Philosophical aspects of the abortion debate. Sorry I didn't get around to addressing this topic sooner. -Severa (!!!) 22:48, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I also noticed that neither the Dershowitz nor Chomsky quote are listed on the Wikiquote article Abortion. Perhaps we should start by adding them there before we decide in which Wikipedia article they belong. :) -Severa (!!!) 23:25, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the tip. I didn't know there was such a page.LCP 23:43, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I already added the Chomsky quote for you. :) It took me a few minutes to sign up a new Wikiquote account. -Severa (!!!) 23:49, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks!LCP 23:52, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I also just finished adding the quote by Alan Dershowitz. The documentary both quotes are from sounds interesting. -Severa (!!!) 00:00, 18 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Emergency Contraception

"...although in 2006 the Chilean government began the free distribution of emergency contraception" - I don't see how this is relevant to an abortion article. Abortions are illegal in Chile, and the govt allowing emergency contraception is a separate issue. Or is this going to kick up the "emergency contraception is baby-killing" debate??? --Surfsistah —Preceding unsigned comment added by 155.188.183.5 (talk) 14:26, 12 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think it necessarily follows from the sentence structure that emergency contraception must be a kind of abortifacient. I see it as simply noting that, although Chile is one of only five countries in the world which do not allow abortion when the pregnant woman's life is at risk, it's policy on birth control in general may not be as strict. If other editors think that the information on the availability of EC in Chile is not relevant to the topic of the article, however, I wouldn't reject to its removal. This would certainly be a step toward addressing concerns over this article's length that have been raised in the past. -Severa (!!!) 19:11, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Do we really need all those external links?

The external links section is a hodge-podge of links to groups advocating a specific position. Are those really needed? That section is growing into a linkfarm, and already a few links have appeared to groups that seem rather non-notable, at least to me. If they are needed in this article, why have such a disorganized list? It's simple to create a table with pro-choice and pro-life columns. =Axlq 22:09, 20 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with this. We could probably replace almost all those with a single {{dmoz}} link. --h2g2bob (talk) 23:34, 21 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Are many of the links included in the "External links" section of this article necessary? Yes and no. I believe that, ideally, we would have a much more streamlined link section, which would include only informational sites and would refrain from linking to partisan organizations. The "External links" section as it exists today is actually the result of at least two pruning efforts in the past (see Archive 12, "External Links overhaul" and Archive 14, "Too many links!"). If one removes the partisan links entirely, though, it ultimately just leads back to the disorganization which one is seeking to avoid, as casual readers unfamiliar with the history of the article will notice the lack of such links and feel the need to fill the gap. The goal was to arrive at a sort of equilibrium between having an indiscriminate laundry list of partisan links and having no partisan links at all. We've thus tried to bring the section under control, by creating a system of organization, and by routinely monitoring for and reverting any newly-added links. As this is the English edition of Wikipedia, we've selected two representative organizations — one pro-choice and one pro-life — for each of the five major Anglophone countries (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States). The links in the "non-neutral" sub-section of "External links" are ordered alphabetically by country. -Severa (!!!) 18:20, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Atheists of Australia

I removed a link (one which has been removed many times in the past) since (i) the frequency with which it appears is evidence of linkspamming, and (ii) it is not a particularly outstanding link in an area for which there are many superior to choose from (and Wikipedia is not a directory of the web). Thoughts? --TeaDrinker 23:11, 21 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The linked page adds relatively little, and the "periodically removed by the unscrupulous" comment suggests its added in bad faith. Good work in removing it. --h2g2bob (talk) 23:32, 21 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, I'm guessing the editor is new and is assuming it is being removed by pro-life editors as part of some nefarious censorship scheme. I added a hidden note in the page, hopefully the user will see it and check in here. We can probably remove it in a few days. Meanwhile, as a traditionalist in the nefarious plan department, I will stroke my black mustache and laugh manically. --TeaDrinker 01:56, 22 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Or perhaps not, the editor continues to add it. I'm at 3 reverts for the day so won't remove it again just yet. --TeaDrinker 03:41, 22 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The anon editor who added it has gone well past 4RR by now, and I have reported it. =Axlq 04:09, 22 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
At least for the time being, the page semi-protection has been restored, so the disruptive editing threat has been "neutralized" for the time being. I left a similar note at the 3RR report.-Andrew c [talk] 04:16, 22 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

"The linked page adds relatively little, and the "periodically removed by the unscrupulous" comment suggests its added in bad faith." Wrong on both counts guys! Atheists don't have faith, good or bad. ;) And as for adding very little, in whose opinion? I would have thought an atheist perspective, considering the bombardment of religious perspectives would add quite a bit to the debate. AusAtheist 04:36, 22 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I don't want to sound insulting, since I suspect (given your username) you are affiliated with that site. The fact is, however, there are many many such essays on the internet. Even if it were the best exposition of atheism and abortion, I don't think it would need to be linked since there's no effort to capture religious (or areligious) views on abortion. As it is, however, I believe the essay is more the views of an atheist, rather than the views of atheism on abortion. Please also note that if you're affiliated with the site, you probably should not be adding the link (per policy on external links). Thanks, --TeaDrinker 06:31, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Another thing, if you look at the external links, for the partisan/affiliated organizations, we try to link to the most notable pro-choice and pro-life oraganization from various English speaking countries. Because we already have a pro-choice link from Australia, I ask you, do you think you link/organization is more notable than "Children by Choice", and therefore should replace that link with your link? There is a delicate balance with the links, and would it be fair to the US or the UK to have more links from Australia? Would it be fair to the pro-life side to have more links to pro-choice sites? This is a top tier article, and we should keep linking down to a minimum or else things could get way out of hand. There may be a subarticle where this link is more appropriate. Also, if you are affiliated with the site, please see WP:COI.-Andrew c [talk] 14:43, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I would consider adding the link to Abortion and religion, where, given its theme, it might be more relevant. Another option is Atheist Foundation of Australia. -Severa (!!!) 19:28, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Future Fertility Risks

Morality is wonderful, but why doesn't even this article mention the inherrent risks to future fertility that come with abortions? Politics are great and the life/choice sides have their points, but this is an encyclopedia, as in a REFERENCE source for people seeking information. Women seeking information about abortions should know of potential risks, which involve much, much more than simple depression! 128.195.186.56 22:34, 25 October 2007 (UTC)Adieu[reply]

I'll do some research on this, but to help us out, do you have any reliable sources we could site to make these claims? Keep in mind that all content on wikipedia needs to be verifiable. Thanks.-Andrew c [talk] 22:51, 25 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The information related to health is found under the "Health considerations" section. "Sterility" is one of several potential risks listed in its first paragraph. -Severa (!!!) 22:53, 25 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It is a bit buried. However, Health Effects is getting bloated. Since fertility alone could have its own sub-section, and there is still more information regarding other health topics, I wonder if a seperate page isn't called for.LCP 04:04, 7 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I can see dividing up the section along the line of expected/unexpected effects as you once suggested (see Archive 28, "Failed Abortions"). We could have a "Typical aftereffects" sub-section for common, expected effects like cramping, and another, "Serious complications," for uncommon effects like organ perforation and infection. I do think individual sub-headings for each effect would be a bit much. A spin-out article might not be a bad idea, though, as this is what has been done with Complications of pregnancy. -Severa (!!!) 04:58, 12 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Critieria for what should go into a “Top tier article"?

I am struggling to understand Severa’s critieria for what should and should not go into a “Top tier article.” S has used the argument, “X should be deleted because it is too Y for a top tier article” on several occasions, and I would be grateful for a clear explication of the criteria. Please note, I respect that S has been around for a while, and I am not saying that I object to S's edits. I am saying that I do not have a acceptable grasp of the criteria and that if S could clearly explicate the guidelines, doing so would be helpful to all. Thanks in advance.LCP 22:20, 31 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

This article basically serves as a hub for all other articles in the abortion series. Its job is to summarize the most relevant of these sub-articles. Because of this prominent position, as well as the likelihood of "abortion" being searched for over other, more obscure terms, this article can act as a kind of inbox. People looking to add information on Y may be unaware of the existence of an article dedicated specifically to the subject of Y and so will default to making their edit here. I imagine our job as being to sort through all of the edits in our "inbox," and, where applicable, to file them away in relevant sub-articles. For instance, if new legislation regarding abortion is passed in New Zealand, information on this law would be better added to Abortion in New Zealand than to Abortion.
Wikipedia:Summary style#Rationale has some ideas on how to go about dividing up information, but, beyond that, there really aren't any set criteria:
"The idea is to summarize and distribute information across related articles in a way that can serve readers who want varying amounts of detail. Thus giving readers the ability to zoom to the level of detail they need and not exhausting those who need a primer on a whole topic."
It's something which should be considered on a case-by-case basis. We've been a bit more permissive on article length, given the complex nature of the topic, but, when it comes to new additions, we've tended to err more toward the side of conserving space. The purpose is to try to reserve a spot for yet-to-be-written sections (namely, the summary of Religion and abortion, "Arts, film, and literature," and "Historical perspectives"). This way we can slot in summarizations of other abortion-related sub-articles here in the future, providing a concise, "zoomed out" view of these topics for readers who only want a brief amount of detail. -Severa (!!!) 18:52, 4 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks Severa! That was very helpful, particularly the analogy. Would it be a bad idea to put a brief disclaimer, from Wikipedia:Summary style#Rationale, at the top of the page with all of the other caveats?LCP 16:56, 5 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This is a very good idea, LCP! I'll try adding a note about article length to the FAQ at the top of this page. -Severa (!!!) 00:02, 12 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Health Considerations: misinterpreted citation?

In the intro to Health considerations, "sterility" is listed as one, however the study listed to support this was a study linking smoking, multiple induced abortions and secondary infertility. Since secondary fertility is when you can't become pregnant after you've already had one child, the study isn't about sterility, per se. I question the use of this study to support the general assertion that abortion causes sterility. I'm going to change "sterility" to "secondary infertility". However, the citation as it stands is unclear at best. Given that the study focuses not on abortion methods as the article states, but on multiple abortions, I question the citation in conjunction with the wording of the statement. I suggest that either the statement is clarified later in the body of the section, that someone find a more appropriate source to cite, or that the ref. be removed. Any thoughts? Phyesalis 04:50, 8 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I do not share your understanding of the study. It appears to me that the study assessed the risk of infertility from abortion and only then added that smoking increased the odds even more.LCP 22:21, 14 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The study isn't about "sterility" but secondary infertility. They aren't the same things. Scientific definitions aren't interchangable. If the study says it's about secondary fertility, it isn't about sterility. Changing the term constitutes OR as it is counter to the author's interpretation. Phyesalis (talk) 01:21, 26 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Undue weight concerns

The section called Health considerations places undue weight on the risks of abortion. A long list of potential complications is given, without clear indication of exactly how often these risks occur, or what factors make the risk greater or lesser. I cannot find any other article on a surgical procedure that puts such great emphasis on describing the risks of the procedure in detail, and none that do so without clarifying the size of the risk.

The initial paragraphs of the section titled "Health considerations", as it was prior to my edit, are below. The changes I made begin at the top of the Health concerns section, and they end at the beginning of the paragraph that begins with the phrase, "Assessing the risks of induced abortion". Below is the part of the section, as it was:

Early-term surgical abortion is a simple procedure, which is considered safer than childbirth when performed before the 16th week under modern medical conditions.[16][17] Abortion methods, like most minimally invasive procedures, carry a small potential for serious complications, including perforated uterus,[18][19] perforated bowel[20] or bladder,[21] septic shock,[22] sterility,[23][24][25] and death.[26] The risk of complications can increase depending on how far pregnancy has progressed.[27][28]

Dilation of the cervix carries the risk of cervical tears or perforations, including small tears that might not be apparent and might cause cervical incompetence in future pregnancies. Most practitioners recommend using the smallest possible dilators, and using osmotic rather than mechanical dilators after the first trimester.

Instruments that are placed within the uterus can, on rare occasions, cause perforation[27] or laceration of the uterus, and damage structures surrounding the uterus. Laceration or perforation of the uterus or cervix can, again on rare occasions, lead to more serious complications.

Incomplete emptying of the uterus can cause hemorrhage and infection. Use of ultrasound verification of the location and duration of the pregnancy prior to abortion, with immediate follow-up of patients reporting continuing pregnancy symptoms after the procedure, will virtually eliminate this risk. The sooner a complication is noted and properly treated, the lower the risk of permanent injury or death.

Here are the references:

  1. ^ Bazelon, Emily. The New York Times. Is There a Post-Abortion Syndrome?
  2. ^ Bazelon, Emily. The New York Times. Is There a Post-Abortion Syndrome?
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ Gomez, Lavin C., & Zapata, Garcia R. (2005). - "Diagnostic categorization of post-abortion syndrome". Actas Esp Psiquiatr, 33 (4), 267-72. Retrieved Setepmber 8, 2006
  5. ^ a b c Zabin, L.S., Hirsch, M.B., Emerson, M.R. (1989). When urban adolescents choose abortion: effects on education, psychological status and subsequent pregnancy. Family Planning Perspectives, 21 (6), 248-55. Retrieved September 8, 2006.
  6. ^ a b c Russo, N. F., & Zierk, K.L. (1992). Abortion, childbearing, and women. Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 23(4), 269-280. Retrieved September 8, 2006.
  7. ^ a b c Schmiege, S. & Russo, N.F. (2005). Depression and unwanted first pregnancy: longitudinal cohort study Electronic version. British Medical Journal, 331 (7528), 1303. Retrieved 2006-01-11.
  8. ^ a b c Sexual behavior during the first eight weeks after legal termination of pregnancy
  9. ^ a b c The course of mental health after miscarriage and induced abortion: a longitudinal, five-year follow-up study - Norway
  10. ^ Bazelon, Emily. The New York Times. Is There a Post-Abortion Syndrome?
  11. ^ [2]
  12. ^ Gomez, Lavin C., & Zapata, Garcia R. (2005). - "Diagnostic categorization of post-abortion syndrome". Actas Esp Psiquiatr, 33 (4), 267-72. Retrieved Setepmber 8, 2006
  13. ^ Bazelon, Emily. The New York Times. Is There a Post-Abortion Syndrome?
  14. ^ [3]
  15. ^ Gomez, Lavin C., & Zapata, Garcia R. (2005). - "Diagnostic categorization of post-abortion syndrome". Actas Esp Psiquiatr, 33 (4), 267-72. Retrieved Setepmber 8, 2006
  16. ^ Henshaw, Stanley K. "Induced Abortion: A World Review, 1990" International Family Planning Perspectives 23:246-252, 1991.
  17. ^ Grimes, D.A. (1994). The morbidity and mortality of pregnancy: still risky business. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 170 (5 Pt 2), 1489-94. Retrieved December 21, 2006.
  18. ^ Legarth, J., Peen, U.B., & Michelsen, J.W. (1991). Mifepristone or vacuum aspiration in termination of early pregnancy. European Journal of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Biology, 41 (2), 91-6. Retrieved December 21, 2006.
  19. ^ Mittal, S., & Misra, S.L. (1985). Uterine perforation following medical termination of pregnancy by vacuum aspiration. International Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, 23 (1), 45-50. Retrieved December 21, 2006.
  20. ^ WHO Health Organization. Medical Methods for termination of pregnancy. WHO Technical Report Series 871, 1997
  21. ^ "Abortion, Complications". eMedicine. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
  22. ^ Dzhavakhadze, M.V., & Daraselia, M.I. (2005). Mortality case analyses of obstetric-gynecologic sepsis. Georgian Medical News, 127, 26-9. Retrieved December 21, 2006.
  23. ^ Tzonou, A., Hsieh, C.C., Trichopoulos, D., Aravandinos, D., Kalandidi, A., Margaris, D., Goldman, M., et al. (1993) Induced abortions, miscarriages, and tobacco smoking as risk factors for secondary infertility. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 47 (1), 36-9. Retrieved December 21, 2006.
  24. ^ “Association of induced abortion with subsequent pregnancy loss”. A. A. Levin, S. C. Schoenbaum, R. R. Monson, P. G. Stubblefield and K. J. Ryan. JAMA Vol. 243 No. 24, June 27, 1980.
  25. ^ “Ectopic pregnancy and prior induced abortion”. Levin AA, Schoenbaum SC, Stubblefield PG, Zimicki S, Monson RR, Ryan KJ. Am J Public Health. 1982 Mar;72(3):253-6.
  26. ^ Lanska, M.J., Lanska, D., & Rimm, A.A. (1983). Mortality from abortion and childbirth. Journal of the American Medical Association, 250(3), 361-2. Retrieved December 21, 2006.
  27. ^ a b Pauli, E., Haller, U., Zimmermann, R. (2005). Morbidity of dilatation and evacuation in the second trimester: an analysis. Gynakol Geburtshilfliche Rundsch, 45 (2), 107-15. Retrieved December 26, 2006.
  28. ^ Bartley, J., Tong, S., Everington, D.,& Baird, D.T. (2000). Parity is a major determinant of success rate in medical abortion: a retrospective analysis of 3161 consecutive cases.... Contraception, 62(6), 297-303. Retrieved December 26, 2006.

The feel of the section is that abortion is terribly dangerous. To give a long list of potential complications without putting the risks in context constitutes undue weight on the risk of abortion. We must either leave the section as it is right now, or we must clarify the size of the risk of each complication, and of all complications. Photouploaded (talk) 14:40, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree. Serious undue weight. And what the !!!! does fetal pain have to do with the health risks of abortion? PAS and ABC have no legitimate scientific backing (Weldon of PAS noteriety got his degree in bioethics online afetr being an engineer) and ABC has been repeatedly refuted by the international scientific community. Phyesalis (talk) 20:12, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

ABC discredited

First, wasn't my word choice, but I support it. There has never been any credible evidence for a causal relationship. While many studies have been done on correlative relationships, the majority of studies have shown that there isn't even a correlative relationship. International consensus (first established by the 2003 NCI consensus workshop, subsequently upheld by every major cancer and gynecology org, and further verified by numerous studies after the fact, and canonized by a body of peer-review literature on the subject of junk/B.A.D.(biased, agenda driven)/pseudoscience politics) on this matter is well-established. This isn't a debate. It is an incredibly well-documented fact. Please provide some top-tier tertiary sources to back up your claim that it isn't discredited. Phyesalis (talk) 01:30, 26 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Some correlative studies that show no link have been discredited as flawed. Some of the organisations opposing a link are dominated by agenda-driven liberals and leftists. One of the refs that supports the link being discredited is Planned Parenthood, hardly a neutral source. The latest study of correlation has not been discredited scientifically, just criticised by a Horizon writer. rossnixon 00:40, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Please read the Abortion Breast cancer hypothesis talk page - the rejection of this theory has been well-documented by NCI, supported by the director of epidemiologal research for the American Cancer Society: “This issue has been resolved scientifically . . . . This is essentially a political debate.”, the Committee for Oversight and Government Reform, the ACOG, the RCOG AND EVERY OTHER REPUTABLE CANCER ORGANIZATION. No reputable study (that is by an epidemiologist in a well-respected peer-review journal) has ever supported a causal relationship. The ABC hypothesis posits a causal relationship, which would require a well-established correlative relationship. No legitimate epidemiologist or cancer org even recognizes a correlative relationship. Only pro-life actuaries, engineers and 3 scientists with no epidemiological background support this theory. You're just flat wrong. I've got miles of documentation on the fact that this theory is refuted. A couple of crack-pots publishing in questionable pro-life sources does not mean the rejection of the theory is overturned. I'll be happy to update the sources. It's not in my timeframe today but I'll update it tomorrow. Phyesalis (talk) 01:51, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I've changed "discredited" to "controversial". And I've asked a question under "Parick Carroll" here[[9]] rossnixon 01:25, 28 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
rossnixon, if you want to change this, then debate the proposal on the appropriate talk page at Abortion-breast cancer hypothesis first. If such a change is ultimately approved there, then it'd only make sense to change it here too, otherwise please stop toying with the wording here. Erth64net (talk) 03:04, 28 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Erth64net, but he can save his time. It's not up for debate. It is a well-documented fact that no major cancer org or expert (or even credible scientist) buys ABC. Furthermore, Carroll is not a scientist, he is an actuary, not an epidemiologist. Even if he were a legitimate scientist - one study in a pro-life journal of ill-repute does not topple the National Cancer Institute, the Netherlands Cancer Institute, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, New England Journal of Medicine, and the head of Epidemiology for the American Cancer society. Also, his 2001 study was labelled as "mischief-making". And this study hasn't been reported much in the mainstream media (read all the pro-life rags bitterly complaining about it), because he isn't a legitmate epidemiologist. Phyesalis (talk) 03:16, 28 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Until I see the appropriate change at Abortion-breast cancer hypothesis, or sufficient logic/references explained, I'm going to continue reverting such changes, as I've done here and here. I see absolutely no reason why the wording of this paragraph should differ from what's found on the actual Abortion-breast cancer hypothesis page. Such differing messages are simply unnecessary, and confusing, for a reader. Erth64net (talk) 02:02, 5 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree (though we shouldn't edit war over this, either side). Per our summary style and spin out article guidelines, a top tier article should summarize content of the more detailed articles. The two articles should not contradict each other, and I agree that the place to take up major changes is the more detailed article. -Andrew c [talk] 02:26, 5 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed. I have addressed this on Rossnixon's talk page. This should be the end of it. Phyesalis (talk) 03:23, 5 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree strongly with framing the ABC issue from the first sentence as a "discredited" or "rejected theory." This has been attempted in varying forms in the past (see Archive 19, "Breast Cancer bias") and it is just as inappropriate now as it was then. That said, though, I am not at all opposed to noting the direction of majority opinion on the ABC hypothesis, so as to avoid undue weight. I believe that last sentence of the first paragraph of "Breast cancer" does this. -Severa (!!!) 21:42, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

ABC Hypothesis wording

It says in the ABC hypothesis article, "The abortion-breast cancer (ABC) hypothesis (also referred to by supporters as the abortion-breast cancer link) is a rejected theory[36][37] that posits a causal relationship between induced abortion and an increased risk of developing breast cancer. In early pregnancy, levels of estrogen increase, leading to breast growth in preparation for lactation." I don't believe that the ABC hypothesis is a theory. Is there any scientific source that says that it is anything more then a hypothesis? That it is actually a theory? champben (talk) 11 December 2007 (UTC)

It isn't a theory, it is an hypothesis that has been discredited.--IronAngelAlice (talk) 23:41, 13 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Post-abortion syndrome

Much work has been done by several editors on this article. The work done should be reflected on the abortion article, no? Here's what the PAS article says:

Post-abortion syndrome (PAS), post-traumatic abortion syndrome and abortion trauma syndrome, are terms used to describe a set of adverse psychopathological characteristics which are proposed to occur in women following an induced abortion.[1] Primarily a term used by pro-life advocates,[2][3][4] PAS is not a medically recognized syndrome,[5] and neither the American Psychological Association nor American Psychiatric Association recognize it. Some physicians and pro-choice advocates have argued that PAS is a myth created by opponents of abortion for political purposes.[6][7]

A number of studies have concluded that abortion has positive or neutral effects on women. Others have found a correlation between clinical depression, anxiety, suicidal behaviors, or adverse effects on women's sexual functions and abortion. Various factors, such as emotional attachment to the pregnancy, lack of support, and conservative views on abortions, may increase the likelihood of experiencing such feelings. No studies have established a causal relationship between abortion and negative psychological symptoms experienced by women.[8]

Fetal Pain

I moved the "fetal pain" section as it basically constitutes a POV violation. All effects in the section and subsection pertain to the woman. Inserting a section about fetal pain suggests a pro-life stance that the fetus is a person who experiences effects and thereby has considerations about their health. A fetus has no standing of personhood and is not the patient. This, I feel, is inappropriate. The section is "Health considerations", I think the fact that the fetus is killed kind of makes pain a side issue. If we discuss fetal pain, then we would then have to mention that the fetus is killed as that would seem to be more significant than disputed issues of pain. This I think that including it in the social section is more appropriate as it is not a medical issue (it has nothing to do with the patient's health) but a social one. I'm changing it back. I would appreciate discussion of this matter. Phyesalis (talk) 20:28, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

There is no precedent in this article for limiting the content of the "Health considerations" sub-section in the fashion that you are suggesting, and, from the existence of the article Fetal surgery, I do not see any grounds for the conclusive claim that a fetus can never be a patient (or be the subject of medical side effects). "Fetal pain" is included under "Suggested effects" — a section which was carefully titled so as not to take sides on matters which are widely disputed. While putting information on fetal pain in the main part of the "Health considerations" section would probably be POV, the word "suggested" leaves open the question of whether a fetus can be subject to medical considerations, but, in going out of our way to move "Fetal pain" out of "Health considerations," we throw off that balance and now are taking sides. The point is that the issue you propose to solve by moving the section is already addressed by the title "Suggested effects." Also, let's please stay on track, and avoid making personal observations like "A fetus has no standing of personhood and is not the patient." -Severa (!!!) 21:14, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
(Edit conflict)As I see it, this article isn't FA, which means there's a lot of room for improvement. The argument of precedence is lacking for me. When I originally changed it a few weeks ago, no one had a problem with it. Does this establish precedent? Either way, I think precedent must take a back seat to NPOV. The subject of an abortion is the woman who recieves the abortion, the object of the abortion is the fetus. The woman, not the fetus, is the subject/patient. Fetal pain is not a health effect for the patient. The fact that the fetus has no standing of personhood (which is why abortion is legal and not considered murder) is not a personal observation. It is relevant to the argument. If the fetus had standing as a person, and was not being killed, then the health effects of abortion would be relevant. Placing "fetal pain" in the health effects section seems to be a POV violation as it implies that a)the fetus is a person (unsupported by legal, philosophical and medical data) and b) that person is the subject(patient) who receives the abortion. Phyesalis (talk) 21:57, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding this related edit by Photouploaded, a failed abortion is indeed a health consideration for the woman, because, if a woman is still pregnant after having had an abortion, it means that something went wrong with the procedure she underwent. It's clearly belongs in the main body of "Health considerations." -Severa (!!!) 21:54, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Again, precedent does not determine a WP article. Policy does. Placing "fetal pain" under the "Health considerations" section (which discusses the woman's health considerations) in the "Suggested effects" violates NPOV, citation requirements and commonsense.
  • It implies that fetal pain is a health consideration for the woman. This is unsupported by documentation and commonsense. Logically, since it is not a woman's health issue, it should be in the social section.
  • This is a social issue over whether or not fetuses should be given anesthesia, it is not a "health" consideration since the fetus is going to be killed.
  • The sources that support "fetal pain" are primarily sources that should not be used to support scientific claims: A press release from an unreliable website (press releases aren't even reliable sources for non-scientific info), a website on religious tolerance (not appropriate source of sci. info),
  • The legitimate scientific sources do not contextualize fetal pain as a medical health concern for the fetus in the context of abortion, but either as an issue in ensure the fetus' death (not health) or in the case of fetal surgery, thus it would appear to be a violation of SYN/OR:
  • The scientific study Fetal Surgery: The Anathesia Perspective about fetal pain does not mention abortion, as it is discussing fetal pain in terms of anesthesia and fetal surgery and would seem to violate WP:SYN.
  • The article on fetal awareness Fetal Awareness has this to say in it's conclusion about the context of abortion: "the working party will consider the implications for abortion practice - a matter raised recently in Parliament. In this context, the gestation period in terminations from Jan.- Mar. 1996 is shown in Figure 2; 27 out of 45,385 were later than 24 weeks, and the majority (87%) were in the first trimester. Current guidance by the RCOG is that specific methods to ensure fetal death in utero should be taken whenever there is a possibility of the fetus being able to breathe after delivery. Such procedures should be routine at gestations over 21 weeks.." Not health considerations for the fetus or the woman, but as a consideration to make sure the fetus is actually dead.
So let's talk turkey, this is hardly a reliable social section, let alone a reliable scientific/medical section. It should be rewritten in accordance with source standards and moved to social. There is no reason for it to remain in the section on a woman's health considerations. Phyesalis (talk) 04:25, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In my expercience on Wikipedia, I've found that consensus is often the final word in terms of editorial decision-making, even to the exclusion of other policies (according to WP:CON, "Policies and guidelines document communal consensus rather than [create] it)". Policies and guidelines help to determine content that is suitable on a broad, site-wide basis, while consensus helps to determine content that is suitable to a specific article on a case-by-case basis. At this article, consensus allowed us to reach the decision to not include graphic photos and to use the word "death" in the introduction, although many have observed that the absence of one or the presence of the other is evidence of an NPOV violation.
As for the statement ""The fact that the fetus has no standing of personhood (which is why abortion is legal and not considered murder) is not a personal observation," this is a classic example of begging the question. It fails to account for the fact that abortion is illegal in some parts of the world, and that some people do attribute personhood, or some equivalent quality, to fetuses. The argument against the current structure is thus founded upon a presupposition (i.e., it begs the question), as the conditions for personhood are not defined, nor why a fetus does not meet them. We aren't here to answer philosophical questions so we shouldn't begin our examination of the article from the definitive position that X is (or is not) Y — we should simply ask whether the article conclusively presents X as being (or not being) Y.
The point is that the current article is completely silent on the matter of fetal personhood, because "Fetal pain" is a sub-section of "Suggested effects," a title which only implies that a fetus may or may not be a subject of health considerations related to abortion. There is a thin line to be walked between definitive statements that a fetus is a subject (e.g., "safer for woman") and definitive statements that it is not. The point is to avoid taking sides, and, by moving the "Fetal pain" section out of the carefully-constructed neutral zone that is "Suggested effects," we would essentially be making the definitive statement that a fetus is not a subject. -Severa (!!!) 19:28, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

You haven't addressed the citation issues. This section does not comply with WP:V regarding scientific sources. I may have missed something but none of the sources discuss fetal pain as a health consideration in the context of abortion only in the context of fetal surgery (that is, wherein surgery is being performed on the fetus to save its life, not kill it). This is a SYN violation. Phyesalis (talk) 23:19, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I've added the citecheck tag to fetal pain (see issues above) and am moving it to social. I'd ask that we leave it there until the citations/SYN and the dispute can be resolved (as I made this change weeks ago). Phyesalis (talk) 01:07, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Last I checked, you were the only one who objected to the current structure, which has been in place for two years. One person's opinion does not form a consensus so any move to change the article before consensus has been secured will be regarded as edit-warring and treated accordingly. -Severa (!!!) 01:15, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, this change has been in place for weeks, there wasn't much of an issue then. As I am the only one actively defending the change and you are the only actively objecting, it seems about even. Except for the fact some of my objections haven't been addressed (if I have not addressed any of yours, please let me know). The change has been in place for some time, precedent is not policy (is there even a policy on precedent? If so, would you mind pointing me in the right direction? Thanks.) So, where do we go from here? Phyesalis (talk) 01:37, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Phyesalis on this one. Fetal pain is not a health consideration, some people consider it a social/ethical issue. Whether it feels pain or not has no bearing on the health of the patient; therefore, this absolutely does not belong under "Health considerations". Photouploaded (talk) 01:55, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I also agree with Phyesalis. --IronAngelAlice (talk) 01:59, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

If the article Fauna of Brazil gave the information, "The north of Brazil is home to a thriving population of pandas," and listed a citation which did not support that claim (or no source at all) — this would be OR. If the the article listed a source which mentioned a couple of pandas in a zoo in Rio de Janeiro, and ran away with this fact until it arrived at a "thriving population," then this would be SYN. But, from how I read the statement "[the] sources do not contextualize fetal pain as a medical health concern for the fetus", your claim of OR/SYN seems to be an extension of your concerns over possible implications of fetal personhood in the article structure. This issue has already been dealt with above, and I don't we're going to find anything new in that regard, even if we try approaching it from a different angle. -Severa (!!!) 02:06, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

No, the personhood issue, I see your point, however, the point that the fetus' health isn't a consideration still stands, also the issue of using texts that do not talk about fetal pain in the context of abortion seems pretty SYN to me (it's hard, there seems to be some grey area between the two, often looks SYN in an effort to promote OR or non-notable opinions, just saying that articles often contain this kind of thing). So, now that we have a few more editors input, where should we go from here? I'm going to leave it wherever it is right now, as Severa and I keep going around in cirlces, because I don't want to edit war. But I think we need to find some other way to resolve the issue. Any suggestions? Phyesalis (talk) 02:34, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I see the point that the subject of "fetal pain" probably belongs under another section -- it is more an ethical issue than a health issue. Although there is a such thing as "the health of the fetus," that's not the context here, and the pain felt by a fetus during dismemberment isn't really a "health consideration." LotR (talk) 15:36, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that fetal pain during abortion is not really a "health consideration" as much as it is part of a description of what is aborted. This article contains virtually no information about what is aborted, also called the "abortus" (defined broadly as the "product or products of an abortion"). So, I would suggest creating a separate section titled "The abortus." I probably won't have time to contribute to editing this article in the near future, but I hope to be able to chime in here at the talk page every now and then.
If a section is created regarding the abortus, there could appropriately be a section on fetal pain. Also, I hope that some thought will be given to including a non-shock image of a typical fetus before it is aborted, so that the image is not a shock image. Susan Faludi, in her book "The Undeclared War Against American Women" (1991) said: "The antiabortion iconography in the last decade featured the fetus but never the mother." In contrast, the present article now features iconography of the mother but not of the fetus, and I think this situation needs some balancing.Ferrylodge (talk) 18:02, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Breast cancer link

I may have missed it. Where does the Breast cancer page provide an overview of ABC? I'm thinking that since ABC has been rejected, there really isn't much of a reason to link to breast cancer, this seems kind of POV. I didn't see an overview over there, so I'm going to remove link. If the overview is there, maybe, but I don't see what the point would be since the actual article of ABC gives the whole view. Thoughts? Phyesalis (talk) 21:08, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Your reasoning sounds reasonable to me :-) The only mention of abortion that I could find was this occurence in the footnotes: "Arthur, Joyce (2002-03). Abortion and Breast Cancer — A Forged Link. The Humanist." I agree that there's no need to provide anything more prominent than the existing wikilink to Breast cancer in the body of the paragraph. Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 21:20, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The article Abortion-breast cancer hypothesis does not provide detailed medical information related to breast cancer (how it is diagnosed, incidence, risk factors, etc.). Thus, by linking prominently to the article Breast cancer, the hope was to offset the narrow presentation of the disease which the ABC article offers. It is the same idea that has been put into action with the supplementary link to Mental health under the "Mental health" section. -Severa (!!!) 21:24, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Of course the article has a narrow view - it's a rejected hypothesis. There is no reason to discuss or link to info about diagnosis, incidence or risk factors because there is no link between abortion and breast cancer. Phyesalis (talk) 21:57, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The point of prominently linking to the article Breast cancer is provide a medical overview free from the trap of politics. Removing that link does the opposite of what it sets out to do, because it could give the impression that breast cancer is a charged issue, like abortion, when that is not the case. -Severa (!!!) 22:10, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Severa, I can't find the logic in your argument. ABC was a hypothesis, not even a theory, that has been debunked. Abortion has nothing to do with Breast Cancer. The problem with the ABC hypothesis is that it is used almost entirely in a political way, not a medical one. Therefore, to "provide a medical overview free from the trap of politics" about ABC is not possible. It would be best not to confuse breast cancer and abortion.--IronAngelAlice (talk) 23:46, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The ABC hypothesis is not "debunked", you could try "disproven"... but that's incorrect as well. The NCI "rejecting" the hypothesis does not make it bad science (debunked) nor does it disprove its proposed mechanism. Scientists may say the evidence is overwhelming against it, but that isn't the same thing. Take care not to misconstrue or oversimplify a complicated issue. I have no opinion on the Breast cancer wikilink... I'd hope a Wiki style guide would be helpful. - RoyBoy 800 03:44, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I see no reason for excluding another main link from the "Breast cancer" sub-section if Mental health is included as a second main link under "Mental health." The politicization which applies to the ABC issue also applies to the case of PAS. -Severa (!!!) 02:37, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The reasons for not linking are:
  • There is no relationship between abortion and breast cancer, therefore no reason to link to breast cancer.
  • Because there is no link, the breast cancer page doesn't even discuss it, so it would be strange to direct a reader to a page which sheds no light on the subject. This would seem to be a violation of the spirit of the manual of style that states that links should only be for relevant subjects. Breast cancer pertains to abortion only through the tenuous and refuted link of ABC, breast cancer is not relevant.
  • Linking to breast cancer would be implying that there is a link contrary to scientific consensus and thus be a violation of WP:NPOV. Phyesalis (talk) 03:32, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I would note the burden of "taking it slow" automatically falls upon those being bold and changing established articles. It's not about ownership, but of maintaining article quality and stability during periods of negotiation/disagreement; further it's my understanding "edit wars" start from the first re-revert... meaning Original -> Good Faith Bold edit -> Good Faith revert -> Bad faith re-revert. This is especially applicable to stable articles. - RoyBoy 800 04:00, 18 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Roy, I chose the word "debunked" because ABC is used as a political tool, not a medical one. My word choice was reflecting the political reality. But "debunked" also holds true for the current medical reality in the context of those who are trying to force political views on to science. According to the National Cancer Institute (among others), early research on ABC was "flawed," and "The newer studies consistently showed no association between induced and spontaneous abortions and breast cancer risk." Therefore, when folks with political aims make medical claims (including Brind et al), I think it appropriate to use the word "debunked." It is especially important to women who may be at risk for Breast cancer to understand the true risk factors. To distract them with the ABC hypothesis seems almost cruel.--IronAngelAlice (talk) 01:55, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Extraordinarily well put, however its clear misuse should not force us into a binary conclusion of yes/no, true/false prose of politics (aka spin). Scientists believe with good reasons early studies are flawed, but they have not shown that to be significant statistically, also the presumption larger recent studies are "good" because they give the desired conclusion (but some with mixed results) which obscure misconceptions and therefore cruelties of their own.
Please, bare this in mind; and understand simple preventative actions (getting the abortion ASAP) can significantly (see Melbye 1997) help minimize (ABC among others) any potential long term risk(s). I don't even see a need to delineate ABC with advice that follows from scientifically established risk factors for abortion (they both lead to the same conclusion if communicated accurately, earlier is better), delineation understandably arises from politics, which is an excuse I found convenient, slightly petty and ultimately inaccurate years ago. It's wrong in its own, harder to find, way. - RoyBoy 800 02:29, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry, I'm unclear about your point.--IronAngelAlice (talk) 06:01, 19 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  1. ^ Gomez, Lavin C & Zapata, Garcia R."Diagnostic categorization of post-abortion syndrome", Actas Esp Psiquiatr. 2005 Jul-Aug;33(4):267-72.
  2. ^ Chris Mooney"Research and Destroy" Washington Monthly, October 2004
  3. ^ Bazelon, Emily. The New York Times Magazine. Is There a Post-Abortion Syndrome?
  4. ^ Science in support of a cause: the new research, by Michael Kranish. Published in the Boston Globe on July 31 2005; accessed November 27 2007.
  5. ^ Grimes DA, Creinin MD (2004). "Induced abortion: an overview for internists". Ann. Intern. Med. 140 (8): 620–6. PMID 15096333. Key summary points of article state that "Abortion does not lead to an increased risk for breast cancer or other late psychiatric or medical sequelae." On p. 624, the authors state: "The alleged 'postabortion trauma syndrome' does not exist."
  6. ^ Stotland NL. The myth of the abortion trauma syndrome. JAMA. 1992 Oct 21;268(15):2078-9. PMID 1404747.
  7. ^ Cooper, Cynthia L. Abortion Under Attack
  8. ^ American Psychological Association. "APA research review finds no evidence of 'post-abortion syndrome' but research studies on psychological effects of abortion inconclusive." Press release, January 18, 1989.