Preconception and the CDC
May. 17th, 2006 06:14 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
OK, I've read the CDC preconception guidelines several times now. I don't see what the hubbub is about.
First, there is a national problem: 85% of all women give birth at least once, and about a third of the children have health problems. Also, about half of the women unintentionally get pregnant at least once. So there is definitely a problem. Part (maybe most) of the problem stems from a lack of knowledge and a lack of available/appropriate health care. A large part of the country can't afford health care. The intent of the CDC guidelines seems to be to address these issues.
Second, if you are physically able to get pregnant, then you might get pregnant, whether you want to or not. Accidents happen. Being "childfree" is not 100% effective against pregnancy.
Third, there has also been some hubbub about the focus on women's health, not men's. Note that the guidance is all about getting a healthy child at the end of the pregnancy, not about getting pregnant, for which the man's health and activities would be important. Frankly, the man's health doesn't really matter much for this process (yes, I know there are exceptions to this). If he's got reproductive problems, most likely the swimmers won't find their target, and pregnancy doesn't happen. Unfair as it may seem, the woman gets to be the incubator.
The guidelines seem focused primarily on providing healthcare and information that was not previously provided. Even those with health insurance may find that insurance doesn't always cover preconception issues. It is not about withholding medicine from those that need it, but making the patient aware of the effects of the medicine on a potential pregnancy.
Several have posted about doctors that won't prescribe certain medicines to women of child-bearing ability, even if the woman never plans to have children. That has nothing to do with the current guidelines, but about poor doctor-patient relationships. Get a different doctor.
Yes, I understand that some are afraid of how the guidelines will be abused by over-conservative doctors and politicians. However, it is apparent that those same docs and politicians will do so anyway, while the guidelines work towards providing much needed information and resources to those who don't have them.
First, there is a national problem: 85% of all women give birth at least once, and about a third of the children have health problems. Also, about half of the women unintentionally get pregnant at least once. So there is definitely a problem. Part (maybe most) of the problem stems from a lack of knowledge and a lack of available/appropriate health care. A large part of the country can't afford health care. The intent of the CDC guidelines seems to be to address these issues.
Second, if you are physically able to get pregnant, then you might get pregnant, whether you want to or not. Accidents happen. Being "childfree" is not 100% effective against pregnancy.
Third, there has also been some hubbub about the focus on women's health, not men's. Note that the guidance is all about getting a healthy child at the end of the pregnancy, not about getting pregnant, for which the man's health and activities would be important. Frankly, the man's health doesn't really matter much for this process (yes, I know there are exceptions to this). If he's got reproductive problems, most likely the swimmers won't find their target, and pregnancy doesn't happen. Unfair as it may seem, the woman gets to be the incubator.
The guidelines seem focused primarily on providing healthcare and information that was not previously provided. Even those with health insurance may find that insurance doesn't always cover preconception issues. It is not about withholding medicine from those that need it, but making the patient aware of the effects of the medicine on a potential pregnancy.
Several have posted about doctors that won't prescribe certain medicines to women of child-bearing ability, even if the woman never plans to have children. That has nothing to do with the current guidelines, but about poor doctor-patient relationships. Get a different doctor.
Yes, I understand that some are afraid of how the guidelines will be abused by over-conservative doctors and politicians. However, it is apparent that those same docs and politicians will do so anyway, while the guidelines work towards providing much needed information and resources to those who don't have them.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-17 11:24 pm (UTC)It's like the difference between introducing someone as "the ballet dancer" or "the black kid". Both describe the exact same individual. But the choice of name -- the choice of emphasis -- the way you introduce, discuss, label -- changes in fundamental ways the enviroment that individual will operate in, the assumptions that will be most active, everything moving forward. Names have power. Words have power. The wizards of old knew that; and the modern politician knows that, too.