Abortion
22 Pages 5578 Words
Abortion: Life or Death, Who chooses?
During the past quarter century, abortion has joined race and war as one of the most debatable subject of controversy
in the United States. It discusses human interaction where ethics, emotions and law come together. Abortion poses a
moral, social and medical dilemma that faces many
individuals to create a emotional and violent atmosphere. There are many points of view toward abortion but the only two fine distinctions are "pro-choice" and "pro-life". A pro-choicer would feel that the decision to abort a pregnancy is that of the mothers and the state has no right to interfere.
A pro-lifer would hold that from the moment of conception, the embryo or fetus is alive. This life imposes on us a
moral obligation to preserve it and that abortion is tantamount to murder.
In the United States about 1.6 million pregnancies end in abortion. Women with incomes under eleven thousand are
over three times more likely to abort than those with incomes above twenty-five thousand. Unmarried women are
four to five times more likely to abort than married and the abortion rate has doubled for 18 and 19 year olds.
Recently the U.S. rate dropped 6 percent overall but the rate of abortion among girls younger than 15 jumped 18
percent. The rate among minority teens climbed from 186 per 1,000 to 189 per 1,000.
The most popular procedure involved in abortions is the vacuum aspiration which is done during the first trimester
(three months or less since the women has become pregnant). A tube is simply inserted through the cervix and the
contents of the uterus are vacuumed out. The most commonly used type of second trimester abortion is called
dilation and evacuation. Since the fetus has bones, bulk and can move, second trimester is not as simple. When as
much of the fetus and placenta are vacuumed out then tweezers are used to remove larger parts. After this, or the beginning of the fifth mo...