A new set of figures was published last week. The figures were released
without much fanfare, but they are potentially explosive: a rising
proportion of premature babies born at 23 weeks are surviving. More
accurately, Britain’s best neonatal units are saving them. Freedom of
information requests from 25 hospitals revealed that 120 babies born at 23
weeks survived over the past four years (likely to be more given the limited
sample size). In 2006 just 19 per cent of babies born at 23 weeks survived,
according to one study. Last year, in specialist units like North Bristol’s,
all those foetuses born at 23 weeks survived.
This is wonderful news. But it is also controversial. It is controversial
because under current laws foetuses can be aborted up to 24 weeks gestation.
In the past that’s when they were considered “viable”. But what if today
many more 23-week-old babies stand a chance of making it? Why should doctors
terminate the life of a foetus now old enough to exist outside the womb?
Many human rights campaigners are seriously provoked by this contradiction.
They argue the abortion limit should be lowered to at least 20 weeks. But
despite the amazing advances in neonatology, there is reason to hesitate at
this suggestion, to step back from the detail and see the whole picture. For
the more fixedly you consider the whole phenomenon of human procreation –
how human beings are brought into the world by their mothers – the more
mistaken it seems to press for a change in the law on these grounds. Why so?
Because to press for 20 weeks would be to accept the premise that viability
is what should ground the right to life. It would to be to click the
“Accept” button confirming the terms and conditions of the debate, rather
than questioning the entire way it has been framed since 1967.
Forty-seven years ago, when Parliament legalised abortion, they did not
declare all pregnancy termination legal. They didn’t hold that every
creature resident in its mother’s womb now lay outside the protection of the
law. No, Parliament picked a point in pregnancy after which the state has a
“compelling interest” to safeguard human life. Lawmakers opted for
viability, described in an earlier piece of legislation (the Infant Life
Preservation Act 1929), as the point at which the foetus was “capable of
being born alive”.
But why should being capable of being born alive – being able to survive the
onset of breathing and oral feeding – be the make-or-break threshold?
Viability may have solidified as a legal concept, but the science shows that
in reality it’s a moving target. That’s precisely what the data coming out
of neonatal units like Bristol’s is telling us. In that case why should the
permissibility of abortion depend upon something as unstable as the state of
medical technology? Upon something differing from hospital to hospital
within our own country, let alone between hospitals in developed and
developing nations? So, say a hospital in Mali has a neonatal unit that
lacks sophisticated technology. It follows that the unborn babies of women
who live in that hospital’s catchment area are not viable. But why should
that affect their human rights?
More fundamentally, what feminist thinkers have shown is the fact that
viability constitutes a profound category mistake. Human beings arrive in
the world in a state of radical dependency. To insist they reach a stage of
independence before we confer rights upon them is to assume, in the words of
feminist political philosopher Seyla Benhabib, a “strange world” in which
“individuals are grown up before they are born”.
In 1973 the Supreme Court judge who wrote the majority opinion in Roe v Wade,
the case which legalised abortion in the US, defined viability as the moment
when the foetus is “potentially able to live outside the mother’s womb
(albeit with artificial aid)”. The bracketed qualification is the giveaway,
revealing viability to be a chimera. No foetus born at 23 weeks, or 26 weeks
is any more “viable” than an infant of three weeks. They are all dependent,
just dependent upon people other than their mother, upon “artificial aid”.
But if not viability, then what? Controversial philosophers like the
Australian Peter Singer have concluded the threshold must be pushed forward,
beyond birth, to the moment when newborns show signs of self-consciousness
(which he dates at “perhaps a month”). Rather than justify infanticide, it
seems more reasonable to go backwards not forwards. But could that ever
really be done? Certainly not by changing the law overnight. Social reform
in this area would require rethinking our whole attitude to the unborn. It
would require love, courage and community – not beyond the bounds of
possibility.
Dr James Mumford is a Fellow at the University of Virginia’s Institute for
Advanced Studies in Culture. His book Ethics at the Beginning of Life was
published by Oxford University Press last year. He writes about moral
issues, American politics and human rights.
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(via Telegraph)