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Should There Be More Rules For Elective Abortion

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Abortion is an important issue throughout many places and comes in various types and variations. The different types of abortion includes mainly, miscarriages, stillbirths, or an elective abortion. “As many as 15 percent of all pregnancies are likely to result in a miscarriage, and stillbirths are thought to occur in nearly one in two hundred pregnancies. ("Abortion.") There needs to be changes made to the abortion process and possibly more people involved in the decision making and should not be allowed under most circumstances. There should be more rules enforced upon deciding to have an elective abortion. However, some abortions cannot be controlled or prevented.
An abortion may also be induced by the deliberate or inadvertent actions of …show more content…

A miscarriage and stillbirths are something a woman cannot control. A miscarriage is a natural occuring or spontaneous abortion that takes place within the first twenty weeks of gestation. A spontaneous abortion that occurs after twenty weeks is called a stillbirth. There is evidence of elective abortion as far back as 1500BC. In earlier times the methods used for inducing abortion included heavy lifting, climbing, pouring hot water on the belly, and fasting, as well as the application of various abortifacients which are chemical or herbal substances ingested to induce abortion. However, there is little evidence confirming these methods actually worked. The legal and moral status of abortion has shifted over the course of history and varied across cultures. In some cultures and societies, abortion was accepted as a way for a woman to control her own fertility. In others, the woman or third party performing the abortion could be punished due to civil or religious laws. The penalties given could be …show more content…

This topic has been in prominent in legislative agendas of both state and federal lawmakers. “The debate pits the moral rights of the fetus against the civil rights of the mother; the two sides that figure most prominently in this debate are generally regarded as either pro-life (anti abortion) and pro-choice (pro abortion) advocates. The majority of pro-life advocates hold that life begins at conception and from that moment forward, the gestating fetus is entitled to the same moral and legal protections as one who is already born. The theory is that abortion is a moral offense equivalent to murder. In the extreme, pro-life advocates hold that abortion is unacceptable for any reason and at any time during gestation. (“Abortion.”) While, many pro-choice advocates agree the fetus is in fact a real person and, thus, entitled to the same moral status as a person outside the womb. However, it is the woman’s right to control her own reproduction and without government interference. They argue, a woman has the right to determine the number and spacing of her children; that safe and legal abortion is a woman’s human right; and that forcing a woman to undergo illegal or unsafe abortions represents a threat to her health or her

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