Indirect abortion

In Catholic theology, indirect abortion is any medical procedure which has a therapeutic medical effect but also results in an abortion as a "secondary effect". Edwin F. Healy makes a distinction between "direct abortion", that is, abortion which is either an end or a means, and "indirect abortion", where the loss of the fetus is considered to be a "secondary effect".[1]

For example, if a woman is suffering an ectopic pregnancy (a fetus is developing in her fallopian tube, not the womb), a doctor may remove the fallopian tube as therapeutic treatment to prevent the woman's death. The fetus will not survive long after this, but the intention of the procedure and its action is to preserve the woman’s life. It is therefore not considered a direct abortion.

While the positions in the previous two paragraphs appear in tension with one another, the relevant distinction may be between cases where the woman's life may be "in jeopardy", and cases where the woman would almost certainly die without the procedure that would incidentally destroy the fetus. However, this does not mean the Catholic Church teaches that a direct abortion, even when intended to save the life of a woman, is ever acceptable.[2][3]

Humanae vitae

Main article: Humanae vitae

This view is also held in Pope Paul VI's 1968 encyclical Humanae vitae, which says that "the Church does not consider at all illicit the use of those therapeutic means necessary to cure bodily diseases, even if a foreseeable impediment to procreation should result there from—provided such impediment is not directly intended for any motive whatsoever". Paul VI quotes Pius XII in a 1953 address to the Italian Association of Urology.

As distinct from therapeutic abortion

According to Archbishop Jose Antonio Eguren in Peru, indirect abortion is not the same as a therapeutic abortion. Eguren asserts that indirect abortion is an extraordinary moral case which has nothing to do ‘therapeutic abortion’ ; in Catholic doctrine, therapeutic abortion simply does not exist, since abortion is never a cure for anything.[4]

Possible confusion with direct abortion

According to Elio Sgreccia, President of the Pontifical Academy for Life, a great number of indications for such abortions have lost their raison d'être. He further asserts that the progressive extension of these indications beyond the scope of medicine has often been driven by political reasons, part of which are related to the eugenics movement.[5]

Tuberculosis, cardiopathies, vascular diseases, diseases of the hematopoietic system (some forms of anemia), kidney diseases, hepatic and pancreatic diseases, gastro-intestinal diseases, pregnancy-related chorea, myasthenia gravis, tumors, all these diseases are claimed to be motives for indications.

However, a thorough study of each one of them shows that the medical basis of these motives is very limited, and that in the cases where, in the absence of a therapeutic alternative, there remains a real risk for the life or health of the woman, these cases are in a strong and progressive downward trend.[6]

Pope Benedict XVI speech in Angola

Pope Benedict XVI later gave a controversial speech in Angola where he appeared to blur the distinction between indirect abortion and direct abortion. He condemned all forms of abortion, even those considered to be therapeutic. This raised the eyebrows of the Vatican communications department, which reiterated the distinction between direct and indirect abortion, and commented that the allocution merely re-stated the Church's opposition to some sections of the gender-oriented Maputo Protocol.[7][8]

References

  1. Indirect Abortion (Taken from "Medical Ethics" by Edwin F. Healy)
  2. http://www.vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/p3s2c2a5.htm
  3. Catholic News Agency: "Sister violated more than Catholic teaching in sanctioning abortion, ethicist says" May 19, 2010
  4. Judge manipulates statements by Father Lombardi to push for abortion in Nicaragua
  5. Sgreccia, Elio. Manuel de bioéthique. Paris, Mame-Edifa, 2004, p. 486
  6. Sgreccia, Elio. Manuel de bioéthique. Paris, Mame-Edifa, 2004, p. 488
  7. Pope reiterates church ban on abortion
  8. Radio Vatican
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