Starting in 1981, for women serving in the military, abortion was only covered if the woman's life was in danger
of continuing the pregnancy.
She created All That Love Can Do to support other families who make the decision to
continue pregnancy after a fatal diagnosis.
Some have also made the controversial argument that fathers should have the right to «financial abortion» when a pregnant mother
continues a pregnancy against their wishes.
Others continue the pregnancy due to beliefs against abortion or because they feel they would rather have some time with the baby even if it turns out to be short.
If there are valid medical reasons for labor induction, your health care provider will discuss with you the benefits of immediate delivery versus
continuing the pregnancy for the health of your baby.
It is their job to provide her with a choice should she not want to
continue a pregnancy with a baby that has genetic anomalies.
Women can only legally get an abortion in Northern Ireland to preserve the life of the woman or
if continuing the pregnancy would make her «a physical or mental wreck».
ACOG and SMFM want to make it clear that delivery should only be planned before 39 weeks
when continuing the pregnancy would put the mother or baby at significant health risks.
I repeat, unless you can figure out how to make
women continue a pregnancy without infringing on their rights, abortion will continue to be legal.
Others decide to
continue the pregnancy anyway, either because of beliefs against abortion or because of a mindset that they want to treasure the time with the baby even if it is short.
AIMS Ireland were invited to make a presentation at Leinster House on the effects of the 8th amendment
on continuing pregnancy.
But if you don't go into labor on your own by your due date, your healthcare provider will probably do tests (such as a sonogram and a non-stress test) to make sure you can safely continue your pregnancy
Some sources, including a midwife and a doctor I trust, suggest continuing the progesterone cream through the first three months of pregnancy and then tapering off to make sure the body has adequate progesterone to
continue the pregnancy until the placenta takes over production in the second trimester.
Finding out that my baby had any of these problems would not affect my decisions about my pregnancy and I would certainly never consider
not continuing the pregnancy, so this is simply not information I need to know and since it could cause needless worry... I skip it.
In the longer video, the social worker discusses a range of options with the hoax patient — suggesting prenatal care if the hoax
patient continues her pregnancy, inquiring about whether the hoax patient would consider adoption, and asking, «Have you definitely decided that you want to terminate your pregnancy?»
Under what conditions do you think you can force someone to
continue a pregnancy against her will without abrogating her rights under the law?
For example, as the result of a similar — yet less restrictive — measure passed in Nebraska in 2010, a woman named Danielle Deaver was forced to
continue a pregnancy even after a health crisis meant she was going to lose the pregnancy.
Continuing the pregnancy, which neither of them wanted, and risking complications that could make her unable to work as well — is that financially responsible?
Women have the right to choose whether to
continue a pregnancy or to end it.
You imbecile, get it through your microcephalic head: if the government can force women to
continue a pregnancy to term, it can just as easily force women to abort.
If the government can force a woman to
continue a pregnancy, what about forcing a woman to use contraception or undergo sterilization?
We can't legally force somebody to donate blood to save somebody else; it thus makes no sense to legally force a woman to
continue a pregnancy that she doesn't want.
She and her husband made the difficult decision to
continue her pregnancy, not to bargain with God nor to make a statement, but because they felt God's clear direction to move forward.
When you figure out how to maintain her rights and still force her to
continue a pregnancy, do let Russ know.
Thus, if a government may deny women the right to end problem pregnancies, it may as easily deny women the right to
continue pregnancies the government may not approve of; or the government that provides tax aid to Catholic private schools could hardly refuse to provide similar aid to fundamentalist schools that derogate Catholicism and Episcopalianism (as Albert Menendez documented in his 1993 book Visions of Reality: What Fundamentalist Schools Teach).
I don't like the idea of late - term abortions though doubtless there are occasional cases where
a continued pregnancy might endanger the mother.
To the best of my knowledge, I can not just pull out my uterus and put it into another person's body and force them to
continue the pregnancy.
That's what irritates me when it comes to the right of women to choose whether or not to
continue a pregnancy.
If I get pregnant, I want the right to choose whether to
continue that pregnancy.
If I choose to
continue the pregnancy, I should have support available to me to ensure that the child I am bringing into the world has a fighting chance (financial support if I am a young poor single mother, medical and social support if I am having a child with a disability, etc.).
We believe everyone deserves to choose not only whether
they continue a pregnancy, but who they want to give birth with and how, as part of a whole life's worth of fair treatment for every person regardless of who they are.
The decision to
continue the pregnancy: Amnio is usually chosen to decide whether to continue a pregnancy.
One of the first questions you may be asked if your baby receives a diagnosis of Patau syndrome is whether you want to
continue the pregnancy (or pursue intensive intervention if the baby is born with health problems).
In addition to having the right to choose whether to
continue a pregnancy or not, pregnant and birthing women have the inherent right to give (or withhold) informed consent to anything that happens to our bodies.