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Re: Cesarean Refusal Results In Murder ChargeFrom: ainsron (ainsron@sbcglobal.net)Fri Mar 12 11:33:37 2004
I agree that it is a slippery slope. From what I see, this woman did not have the capacity to make a decision regarding how or when her baby should be delivered. If she didn't have the capacity to make that decision, she should not be prosecuted for murder of the child. The bigger question is that if she didn't have the capacity to make a decision for herself and her child, why didn't she have a court appointed conservator to make that decision? Did her physicians meet their obligation to her and to her child, or did she even have a physician? It sounded like she simply dropped in and out of the system, visiting different hospitals at different times with no one "responsible" for her. Ronald E. Ainsworth -----Original Message----- From: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net [mailto:ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net] On Behalf Of art fougner, md Sent: Friday, March 12, 2004 9:47 AM To: Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L Subject: Re: Cesarean Refusal Results In Murder Charge IMHO a dangerous precedent - the slippery slope beckons - I am interested in what this group thinks. art
At Fri, 12 Mar 2004, ainsron wrote:
>
-- art fougner, md ich bin ein New Yorker
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