kidney failure infants

kidney failure infants
When would Partial Birth Abortion………….?

ever be considered truly necessary? Please…no simplistic answers like “to save the life of the mother.” I only want answers from qualified medical professional s if possible with specific details as to how this procedure could ever be truly necessary.
I almost died with the birth of my first child. I had final stages of toxemia complete with seizures and kidney failure. They still saved my life AND the life of my child by doing an emergency C section. I want to know why forcibly extracting a full term infant and killing it as it is being born vaginally would ever be medically called for.
Perhaps that will help me understand why so many liberal politicians (including our future President) are so in favor of this gruesome act.

Certain treatment methods necessary to preserve the mother’s life can be dangerous to the fetus. An example is chemotherapy. Stopping treatment may jeopardize the mother’s health or life, but continuing treatment could greatly harm the fetus. Some women may chose to terminate the pregnancy in such a situation, but it wouldn’t be medically necessary.

The only medical conditions that would *absolutely require* any type abortion to save the mother’s life would be an ectopic pregnancy or the need for an emergency hysterectomy.

The medical term for this procedure is intrauterine cranial decompression, ‘partial birth’ is a misleading political rhetoric. There are two other abortion methods that can be preformed in late pregnancy, but these procedures require the fetus to be dissected in utero…”partial birth” is the only procedure that allows the fetus to remain in tact for the family to grieve or hold. Late term abortions are near impossible to obtain without a medical reason in the US.

It is a sad subject, and I feel sympathy for any woman who finds herself in a situation where a late term abortion may be necessary–I’m sure it isn’t an easy decision to make.

African Americans, Kidney Disease and Stroke, Dr. MFaulkner2


Initiation of hemodialysis on an infant with end stage renal disease--a nursing perspective.(1980s)(Case study): An article from: CANNT Journal


Initiation of hemodialysis on an infant with end stage renal disease–a nursing perspective.(1980s)(Case study): An article from: CANNT Journal


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This digital document is an article from CANNT Journal, published by Canadian Association of Nephrology Nurses & Technologists on July 1, 2008. The length of the article is 2036 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTitle: Initi…

ESRD--from infant to adult.(end stage renal disease): An article from: CANNT Journal


ESRD–from infant to adult.(end stage renal disease): An article from: CANNT Journal


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This digital document is an article from CANNT Journal, published by Canadian Association of Nephrology Nurses & Technologists on July 1, 2008. The length of the article is 711 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTitle: ESRD–…


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