Originally posted by KabeRinnaul
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If the hospital had performed an early delivery (for reasons you stated in quote above, doctor treats it as an extreme premature delivery rather than an induced abortion), one of the following will happen:
- Fetus is not viable, dies. Mother is already septic, can't be helped, dies. No better off (and no worse off) than with no intervention. "feces occur".
- By some miracle, NICU is able to save the baby (although it'll probably have serious health problems throughout life). Mother already septic.
- Fetus is not viable, mother lives
- NICU saves baby, mother lives
By treating this as a case of an emergency complication of pregnancy (fetus has been cut off from its "life support system", will die without intervention) rather than an induced abortion, the worst case (doctor is unable to save either the pre-term baby or the mother) is the same as the inevitable result of non-intervention. On the other hand, there is an extremely high probability that one person (most likely the mother) will be saved. Doctrine of Double Effect should apply in this case.
It's all how you look at it - just like I advise company drivers to NOT report a failed air conditioner (it's always the "dehumidifier for windshield defogger" that failed, so it's a safety-related item rather than a driver comfort item).
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