Court ruling on NHS liability over Down’s Syndrome will increase pressure to ‘eliminate’ – Brian Wilson
An international study of families with a Down’s Syndrome member showed that while 25 per cent saw this as a tragedy when first aware, in time this dropped to 0.68 per cent.
I wonder if a question on how children in general turn out would reveal so few families thinking in retrospect it had all been a bit of a “tragedy”? Down’s is different – but very far from tragic.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdI hope that survey and similar positive evidence are included in information to prospective parents faced with decisions about “testing” to discover whether they might – repeat might – have a baby with Down’s.
Hope but doubt – for the drift of public policy is towards elimination rather than empathy; encouraging fear of the unknown in order to remove a social inconvenience rather than promotion of understanding.
The models are Denmark and Iceland where close to 100 per cent elimination has been achieved.
They create a desert and call it peace. Which condition will be next for such clinical, Scandinavian efficiency?
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdA couple in Berkshire are waiting to know how much “compensation” the NHS will have to pay after a pernicious High Court judgment that failure to identify “risk” of a Down’s birth made the hospital liable. So now pressure will be even greater to identify in order to eliminate – even though it leads to more non-Down’s than Down’s terminations.
I unconditionally support the right to choose – but choice must be based on balanced information rather than pressure and prejudice.
People with Down’s and other conditions then suffer from double jeopardy – the fewer there are, the less obligation there is to make decent provision for their needs. Progress comes in some very strange forms.