I've read many threads where doctors refuse to sterilize women because of some bullshit "they might change their mind" excuse. We no doubt have a handful of lawsuit-happy fools to thank for this debacle, ruining the system for the rest of us.
Then I got to thinking: what if women had one or two of their eggs surgically removed and frozen before requesting their tubes to be tied off. They'd still have an opportunity to reproduce. Would that make these doctors less afraid of lawsuits?
I'm loathe for women to be required to submit to major surgery to have their eggs removed, not to mention the cost of maintaining frozen eggs, just so they can cut through the liability bullshit. But this might be at least a temporary solution.
Then again, even in my scenario, doctors might not want to risk a lawsuit. Seems the only way out of this mess is for womens' rights groups to start launching discrimination lawsuits of their own, on behalf of women being denied the surgery. If they can kick up a greater fuss than the women who cried "lawsuit" after being sterilized, the medical industry might pull their heads out of their assess. I'd be glad to support that cause.
Also, I can't help but suspect the number of women who sued after sterilization is a lot smaller than doctors would like to believe. Greed, with a touch of old-fashioned misogyny.
Then I got to thinking: what if women had one or two of their eggs surgically removed and frozen before requesting their tubes to be tied off. They'd still have an opportunity to reproduce. Would that make these doctors less afraid of lawsuits?
I'm loathe for women to be required to submit to major surgery to have their eggs removed, not to mention the cost of maintaining frozen eggs, just so they can cut through the liability bullshit. But this might be at least a temporary solution.
Then again, even in my scenario, doctors might not want to risk a lawsuit. Seems the only way out of this mess is for womens' rights groups to start launching discrimination lawsuits of their own, on behalf of women being denied the surgery. If they can kick up a greater fuss than the women who cried "lawsuit" after being sterilized, the medical industry might pull their heads out of their assess. I'd be glad to support that cause.
Also, I can't help but suspect the number of women who sued after sterilization is a lot smaller than doctors would like to believe. Greed, with a touch of old-fashioned misogyny.
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