sex life:Home > Abortion > Presidential Candidates Have Differing, Related Perspectives On Abortion, Stem Cell Research, Opinion Piece Says

Presidential Candidates Have Differing, Related Perspectives On Abortion, Stem Cell Research, Opinion Piece Says

Main Category:Abortion  Date:2008-7-31 8:51:00  view:61
It is easy to say Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Barack Obama (D-Ill.) have different views on when life begins, use of stem cells and abortion, but the presidential candidates often are addressing very different, but related, beginning-of-life issues, Thomas Marino, a professor of anatomy and cell biology at Temple University's School of Medicine, writes in a Philadelphia Inquirer opinion piece.

According to Marino, McCain considers these issues from the perspective of the embryo, arguing that it has a right to life, while Obama looks at the issues from the perspective that women have the right to make their own decisions about their reproductive health. The candidates' decision to talk about different parts of the story is troublesome in part because most Americans do not know about the early stages of human development, Marino writes. According to Marino, many people might not know that only 30% of fertilized eggs result in a birth and that more than half of implanted fertilized embryos actually complete development while the others normally abort spontaneously. Many people also do not know the degree to which fertilized embryos develop before a woman knows she is pregnant -- including formation of the neural tube and the first heartbeat, Marino writes.

So when the abortion debate occurs, the candidates talk past each other, Marino writes, adding that the best approach would entail the candidates answering two questions -- one concerning when a fetus gains protection from society and when personhood is established, and the other about who has the right to control a woman's decision about her reproductive health and if there is a time when a woman's reproductive rights can be sacrificed by society for the greater good. He adds, Then you might want them to address health care for women, especially those women who cannot afford it. But that is a third issue. Marino writes that if we know their thoughts on these issues, we would find out a lot more about the candidates than we know right now (Marino, Philadelphia Inquirer, 7/17).

Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.nationalpartnership.org. You can view the entire Daily Women's Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery here. The Daily Women's Health Policy Report is a free service of the National Partnership for Women & Families, published by The Advisory Board Company.

© 2008 The Advisory Board Company. All rights reserved.
Related Abortion
*Committees Pass Bills Boosting Global Family Planning Funding; Senate Strikes 'Global Gag' Rule
*European Approval For Roche's Pegasys Personalises Treatment For A Subgroup Of Hepatitis C Patients
*NASONEX(R) Now Approved In Japan For The Treatment Of Allergic Rhinitis In Adult Patients
*Amgen Announces Positive Top-Line Results For Denosumab Treatment Of Bone Loss In Men With Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer
*Study Showed Half Of Patients Treated With Enbrel(R) (etanercept) Plus Methotrexate Can Achieve DAS Clinical Remission
*Merck Responds To Questions About Adverse Events Reported Following Vaccination With GARDASIL®
*Recall Of Sandoz Timolol Ophthalmic Solution 0.25% And Sandoz Timolol Ophthalmic Solution 0.5% Due To Potential Health Risk, Canada
*The ED Conversation Dilemma: Forty Percent Of Men With ED Don't Talk To Their Doctor, Survey Finds
*World Health Organization Restores Permanent International Presence In Iraq
*Modified Virus Used To Treat Prion Disease In Mice
*CDC Numbers: HIV Prevention In US A Failure; AHF Calls For $200M To Te
*Merck Responds To Aids Activists' Pleas; Reduces Price Of Stocrin By 4
*Frost & Sullivan Honours TransPharma Medical For Its Innovative ViaDer
*Nymox Has Global Patent Rights For Statin Drugs For The Treatment And
*Scottish Study Adds Support For World-Wide Ban On Smoking In Public Pl
*Leading Organisations Call For Recognition Of Palliative Care And Pain
*July 2008 National Pharmacy Association Board Meeting, UK
*China Becomes A Physics Powerhouse
*An Environmental Study Into The Office Of The Future
*NIDDK Resource Helps Guide Women With Diabetes Through Healthy Pregnan
*Multiple Sclerosis: new MRI contrast medium enables early diagnosis in
*First National Study Of Diving-related Injuries - In Neighborhood Pool
*American Cancer Society Study Finds High Use Of Complementary Methods
*Immune System Protein Accurate Predictor Of Survival In Pediatric Sept