Monday 29 October 2012

Guam 2012 Senatorial Candidate Inquiry, October 29, 2012


GUAM ALLIANCE FOR THE DEFENSE OF THE UNBORN
Contact: Rosa Santos


October 29, 2012
RE: ELECTION 2012 INQURY
Dear Candidate for the Guam Legislature:

Thank you for reply to our initial inquiry regarding your position on informed consent legislation. Our inquiry was sent out prior to the passage of the bill on Wednesday, October 24, but your views still matter and we will be sure to let them be known to the voters within our network.

If you would like to issue any other statement to further clarify your position relative to the issue of abortion, please feel free to send your thoughts to me by October 31, 5pm.

Some items you may want to consider are two bills that are still currently on the table in the current legislature:

BILL 51-31 THE UNBORN CHILD PROTECTION ACT OF 2011:  recognizes scientific data showing that an unborn child is capable of feeling pain by 20 weeks and would ban abortions after 20 weeks except for strictly defined medical emergencies. 41 states have similar gestational age limits on abortion. Guam has none. See State Policies in Brief here. Read the bill here

BILL 409-31 UNBORN VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE ACT: recognizes the unborn child (child in utero) as a legal victim, if he or she is killed or injured in crimes of violence. While this bill does not address abortion directly, it does recognize the rights and the humanity of the child in the womb. A similar bill was passed by the U.S. Congress and signed into law in 2004. Read more here. Read the bill here or at the Guam Legislature website.

There is also the matter of the need for a bill which would mandate normal medical care for  children who survive failed abortions. Such a bill, known as the Born Alive Act, was passed by the U.S. Congress and signed into law in 2002. A Born Alive Act for Guam was introduced in the 30th Guam Legislature as Bill 309-30 but it was never reported out of committee. It is hoped that the legislation will be re-introduced in the next Legislature.


If you have any questions please feel free to contact me at rcsantos06@yahoo.com


Thank you,


Rosa C. Santos
Guam Alliance for the Defense of the Unborn
Confraternity of Christian Mothers, President, Nuestros Senora de los Aguas

Thursday 25 October 2012

Letter to Former Senator and Bank of Guam President, Lou Leon Guerrero

October 25, 2012
 
        RE: WHERE ARE HIS FACTS

Dear Former Senator Lou Leon Guerrero, 
 

This morning on K57 you asked "Where are his facts?' in reference to my earlier comment that there is abortion on Guam almost every day.

Please follow this link for a copy of Guam Medical Records abortion report as required by law for the years 2008 through 2011. From 2008 to 2011 there were 1,157 reported abortions over 1,260 days. That equals one abortion every 1.089 days.

Also, Senator, please note the ethnicity data: 642 or 55.49% of those abortions were performed on Chamorro mothers. I am hoping that you see that there is a crisis here.

Also, the PDN reported recently that there are nine births per day on Guam which means that we are aborting one out of every ten children with more than half of them being of Chamorro descent. 

Does this concern you? And if you do not support informed consent legislation to at least advise mothers with unwanted pregnancies about adoption, then what do you support? Or are these numbers okay with you?

Please check with CPS. They have reported that even though they have a waiting list of more than ten parents in waiting, they have not had a child available for adoption in five years. 

Something is terribly wrong, Senator, terribly wrong. Your people are dying.

 
NOTE: I do not have Senator Leon Guerrero's contact information. If someone would be so kind as to forward this to her. Thank you.

Tim Rohr
A citizen

DEAR SENATOR CRUZ


October 25, 2012
RE: BILL 52-31
 
 
Dear Senator Cruz, 
 

There is probably no other senator with whom I have battled more in public than yourself. It is certainly no secret that you and I have been on very opposite sides of some very sensitive issues. And there certainly has been no love lost between us over the last few years. 

The reason for the letter is to thank you for being the voice of reason yesterday. I'm sure you did not like the spectacle that Bill 52 had become any more than anyone else did. However, you put your feelings aside and spoke clearly about what Bill 52 was actually about, saying:

"It's not what anybody else thinks what it is. It's not going to affect whether or not one is pro-life or pro-choice. It's just allowing the women to be informed."

No clearer words were spoken yesterday. But beyond that, you said something even more true when you said at some point "this problem is going to have to be treated holistically."
 
You are so right. A society's abortion rate is a measure of its inner collapse. Informed consent legislation is really only a last gasp bandaid to try in some small way to slow the bleeding of a society that has already cut itself - as our newspapers so often remind us.
 
I believe your Bill 415, despite the reservations with some elements in it which I shared in my written testimony in support of your bill, is a large step in the right direction. 
 
I admit, given our previous battles, I was suspicious of your intentions. I even said so on TV. Unfortunately, most of my relations with the Legislature have been immensely soured and my suspicions raised since the night of November 26, 2010 (the debate over Bill 54-30), and a six-month long battle to obtain a copy of the journal for that session.
 
However, your clear and reasoned approach to the issue at large yesterday, in the midst of so much emotion, was a true example of how personal feelings could be put aside and the true work of the legislature can actually get done. 
 
Coming towards the end of the session as it did, your words brought a certain peace to a terribly turbulent situation. And I confess to being the one that probably started that turbulence. I make no apology. I have been fighting to have a fair debate on informed consent legislation since February of 2009 when Bill 54-30 was first introduced. 
 
Whether Bill 52-31 would have ever seen the light of day had I not attacked those who attacked it, is anybody's guess. But we're beyond that now. And again I simply want to thank you for what you said yesterday and I want to express my support for Bill 415, at least in its intent if not in detail - something I would be willing to work with you on.
 
In fact, Senator Cruz, you have my vote. In fact, this is why I am sending this letter and making it public, and copying it to the press. In fact, Senator Cruz, if you had voted "no" on Bill 52-31 you would have still had my vote for simply being intellectually honest and saying what you said about it, which I repeat here:
 
"It's not what anybody else thinks what it is. It's not going to affect whether or not one is pro-life or pro-choice. It's just allowing the women to be informed." 
 
I was so very impressed by how you rose above the personal and did the people's business and that deserves a vote. You will have mine.
 
 
God Bless You and Thank You,
 

Tim Rohr
A citizen

Wednesday 24 October 2012

ESPERANSA RESPONDS TO DR. SHIEH

October 24, 2012



RE: ESPERANSA ATTORNEYS RESPOND TO DR. SHIEH'S CONCERNS ABOUT BILL 52-31

  
  
Yesterday, October 23, 2012, on the eve of the special legislative session called by Governor Calvo to vote on Bill 52-31, the women's informed consent for abortion bill, Dr. Thomas Shieh, an OBGYN, sent a letter to the Legislature questioning some aspects of the bill. 

A copy of Doctor Shieh's original letter can be obtained here
  
*****
  

  
DR. SHIEH: Page 3: Under 9. Gestational age means the time has elapsed since the first day of the woman's last occurring menstruation.
  
The true gestational age applies here only if the woman's menstruation is regular, but for many women with uncertain menses, the true gestational ages can only be determined by an ultrasound examination. This ultrasound examination's margin of error if conducted in the first trimester is accurate within one week. If the ultrasound is conducted in the second trimester or third, it has a margin of error within two weeks. This section for your consideration should be amended to read; "If a woman's menses is unsure, gestational age is based on the ultrasound examination otherwise is based on her first day of her last occurring menstruation."
  
ESPERANSA:  When we drafted this legislation we did so under the presumption that it would eventually come under attack by the abortion industry and its allies.  In some states where similar legislation required doctors to conduct ultrasound examinations to determine the gestational age, this requirement was attacked as constituting an "undue burden" on the woman's right to an abortion.  In order to avoid similar attacks, we decided not to require ultrasound examinations.  Instead, gestational age will be calculated based upon the date of the woman's last menstruation which is an accurate way to determine gestational age for most women.  With respect to the minority of pregnant women who have irregular menstrual cycles, this method of calculating gestational age could produce an age determination that is less certain.  For that reason the bill accurately notes that the age provided is a "probable gestational age."
  
DR. SHIEH: Page 5: Under (v). The abortionist has to inform the woman - "The medical risks associated with carrying the child to term;"
  
This part of the bill appears to be contradicting the intent of the bill. Page 1, Legislative intent: "It is essential to the psychological and physical well-being of a woman considering an abortion that she receives complete and accurate information material to her decision of whether to undergo an abortion including information concerning abortion alternatives." The legislative intent is to ensure information about abortion, thus the requirement to inform the woman of the hundreds of RISKS that can be associated with carrying a pregnancy to term may actually encourage a woman to choose an abortion rather than to keep her baby. You may wish to consider this section for deletion.
  
ESPERANSA:  The legislative intent is not to just "ensure [sic] information about abortion."  Rather the intent of bill is to ensure that a "woman considering an abortion...receives complete and accurate information material to her decision of whether to undergo an abortion including information concerning abortion alternatives."  Complete and accurate information about "abortion alternatives" includes information regarding the risks associated with carrying the child to term.      
  
DR. SHIEH: Page: 8 - 10: Under (c): Publication of Materials.
  
There was no requirement to produce materials on the "risks associated" with carrying the child to term. Thus adding to the consideration that section (v) should be deleted, unless you feel the need to produce that part of the educational material, which can be a book of related complications, which I do not think the "Department" can adequately and accurately produce.
  
ESPERANSA: Not true.  Please see proposed Section 3218.1(c)(4), which requires the printed materials to include information regarding "the medical risks associated with carrying a child to term."
  
DR. SHIEH: Furthermore, I would recommend in the legislation a qualified team of obgyns rather than just the "Department" to ensure that the material produced is within specialty and more accurately provided for the woman and their reproductive health.
  
ESPERANSA: If the Department of Public Health and Social Services (Department) decides to seek assistance from someone in the medical community to check the accuracy of the printed materials, the Department may of course do that.  On the other hand, all of the information called for in Bill 52 is widely available in basic embryology and fetology textbooks and at various well respected on line sources.  
  
DR. SHIEH: Page: 9 Under (f): Criminal Penalties. Any person who intentionally, Knowingly, or recklessly violates this Act is guilty of a misdemeanor.
  
This section for penalties appears to be inadequate. If the basis of this act is truly about the
uninformed termination of life, and that the potential of a live human is being taken away, so the penalties for this supposedly reckless violation should be heavier should it not? For your consideration, you may want to make the appropriate amendments to this section.
  
ESPERANSA: The purpose of the criminal sanction is to dissuade abortion providers from violating the law.  We think that a misdemeanor charge will achieve this purpose.  
  
DR. SHIEH: Page 11: Under (g). Civil and Administrative Claims.
  
This section attempts to re-define what constitutes "malpractice." By defining that if a physician violates this act, he or she is committing malpractice that is by all means is not based on evidence of a clear deviation from the standard of care. This sets a dangerous line to cross. Physicians practices a standard of care that is dictated by evidence based medicine that usually comes from the respective specialties, such as the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologist in this particular field and issue. This includes any publications presented are usually by the college. Malpractice should not be defined by the legislature. This can set a dangerous precedent and creates a standard of care deviation, thus for your consideration this section should be deleted.
  
ESPERANSA: Guam law defines malpractice as "any tort or breach of contract based on health care or professional services rendered or which should have been rendered, by a health professional or health care institution to a patient." 10 GCA § 11102(c).  Thus, Guam law recognizes "breach of contract" as a basis for a malpractice claim.  This is consistent with related case law.  "A medical malpractice suit need not be limited to a negligence theory '...there can be recovery on the theory of warranty (or, to give the theory its more accurate name, breach of contract).'" Christ v. Lipsitz, 99 Cal. App. 3d 894, 899 (Ct. App. 1979) citing Depenbrok v. Kaiser Found. Health Plan, Inc., 79 Cal. App. 3d 167, 171 (Ct. App. 1978).  
  
A claim for breach of contract against a physician - although classified statutorily as "malpractice"- would not depend on whether the physician deviated from a particular standard of care (as it would in the case of a tort claim), but rather whether the physician achieved a promised result.  Thus, Dr. Shieh's assertion that Bill 52 is inherently flawed because it establishes a basis for a malpractice claim that is not based upon a standard of care is simply wrong.    
  
More important, however, is that the policy concerns raised by Dr. Shieh do not apply here.  This provision of Bill 52 does not rob the courts of their ability to determine whether the services rendered by the abortion provider meet the applicable standard of care.  It simply gives a woman standing to bring a malpractice claim on account of the doctor's failure to obtain her informed consent.  Whether the doctor indeed failed to obtain the woman's consent would still be left to the courts to decide.  As to whether the subsequent services (i.e., the abortion) met the applicable standard of care, this would not be an element of the claim or an issue before the court.     
  
DR. SHIEH: Lastly, this act also requires information be accurately presented to the woman prior to abortion on the availability of Medical, Financial, and Public Assistance to the mother and her baby. For your consideration, there should be a provision in this act to ensure that should the woman decide against an abortion and later, her fetus is discovered to have a physical or genetic birth defect, how will she able to care for her child. The financial resources available to her have to be realistic.
  
ESPERANSA:  The goal of these particular informational requirements is make sure a woman knows what resources are available to her; and to encourage her to contact these resources so that she obtains a full understanding of what they provide - and don't provide - before she makes her decision.  As to the specific inquiries that a woman chooses to make - whether they relate to birth defects or other issues particular to her circumstances - the intent of the Bill was to leave this to the woman to decide.  Nevertheless, it might be of some value to include among the printed materials a suggestion that the woman raise the issue of physical and genetic defects when she contacts the resources.   

Monday 22 October 2012

GUAM 2012 SENATORIAL CANDIDATE INQUIRY, OCTOBER 22, 2012

To all Guam Senatorial Candidates
October 22, 2012
For Immediate Release
Contact: Rosa C. Santos
Guam Alliance for the Defense of the Unborn
Your Position on Informed Consent Legislation 
An Inquiry
Dear Candidate for the Guam Legislature:


Child Protective Services recently advised that despite a waiting list of "more than ten" parents, CPS has not had a child available for adoption in "at least five years." Yet, according to Guam Medical Records, there is one abortion every 1.2 days.

Also, the recent Blue House case, in which at least one of the girls who was forced to serve as a prostitute was also forced to have an abortion, reveals that at least some abortions which occur on Guam may be coerced - something we as a community should not tolerate.

Everyone, including Pro-Choice advocates, agree that abortion is not desirable and that we as a community must do our utmost to help women with unplanned pregnancies.  

Giving women information about abortion, its risks and alternatives, and their rights to assistance, is a sensible thing to do and was supported by the U.S. Supreme Court in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992)even though the case upheld Roe v. Wade.

Informed consent legislation, like Bill 52-31, would do exactly this. And we are writing to ask you how you will or would vote on a bill which would include the following provisions:

1. That a woman considering an abortion receive complete and accurate information material to her decision of whether to undergo an abortion including:
  • A description of the proposed abortion method and possible risks
  • Probable gestational age of the unborn child
  • Probable anatomical and physiological characteristics of the unborn child
2. That she also receive information about:
  • Medical assistance that may be available to her
  • Public assistance she may qualify for
  • Public services including the availability of adoption
  • The father's liability in providing financial assistance
3. That no abortion be performed or induced without the voluntary and informed consent of the woman upon whom the abortion is to be performed or induced.
4. That a 24 hour "waiting period" be required after she has received the information.

We understand that Bill 52-31 may or may not go to the Floor for debate and could be amended. Thus we are NOT asking you how you will or would vote on Bill 52-31 specifically, but only on a bill that would contain the above provisions and which the Guam Attorney General has confirmed to be constitutional.

Please review and reply back "yes" or "no" by Friday, October 26, 5pm. If you wish to add a comment, feel free to do so. Please reply to rcsantos06@yahoo.com.


If you have any questions please feel free to contact me at rcsantos06@yahoo.com


Thank you,


Rosa C. Santos
Guam Alliance for the Defense of the Unborn
Confraternity of Christian Mothers, President, Nuestros Senora de los Aguas