Abortion among young Vietnamese and untold
stories, distressing consequences
Tuoi Tre News presents some stories involving young people who have incurred
disastrous, long-lasting physical and mental sufferings amidst the rampant
practice of getting abortions at unauthorized clinics in
The latest incident is 48-year-old M.T.M., who was
taken to the Tu Du Obstetrics Hospital about 6:30 pm on April 10 after she
experienced a painful, botched abortion at the Quoc Te [International]
General Clinic, located at 221 Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street, District 1, Ho
Chi Minh City.
Doctors at Tu Du said M. suffered a serious
post-abortion complication and she had to undergo emergency surgery to
survive.
During the surgery, doctors detected about 500ml of
blood in her abdomen, while finding some holes in her uterus and the fetus
cut horizontally.
The woman would have died if she had been hospitalized
later that day.
The incident has again sparked concerns over young
people’s endemic practice of ending their pregnancy at clinics unauthorized
to perform such surgery.
Experts acknowledged that there exists a demand for
getting abortions among Vietnamese people.
Early last year, the World Health Organization ranked
On an online cemetery, the section for stillborn babies
is now home to around several thousand “graves,” most of which were “built”
by conscience-stricken underage “parents.”
Several thousands
of such graves have been 'built' in an online cemetery by teenagers and young
adults to express their apologies for killing their unborn children. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Unlicensed service
During an interview with Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper on Thursday, Dr. Bui Minh Trang, chief inspector of the Ho Chi Minh
City Department of Health, raised a perennial question on why pregnant women,
especially teen girls, choose to stealthily have their abortions at
unauthorized clinics, despite immense health risks and even life threats that
these operations pose.
Reasons include easy access to abortion services
provided by such clinics via abundant online advertisements and pregnant
girls’ reluctance to go to normal hospitals for fear of identity exposure.
According to a recent investigation made by Tuoi Tre reporters,
the Elizabeth General Clinic, based in District 10 in
An undercover Tuoi Tre reporter was told by one of the
online “consultants” that such surgery takes around 30-40 minutes and costs
VND2-5 million (US$93- 233), depending on the fetuses’ age and the techniques
adopted.
The “consultant” assured her that
Similarly, abortion services with different techniques,
including drug-based abortions, are also advertised on the website of the
February 3 General Clinic, located in District 11, Ho Chi Minh City.
The Tuoi Tre reporter came to the clinic on
Thursday afternoon and was told by V., one of the doctors there, that costs
of such operations fluctuate between VND3.8 million ($177) and VND5.8 million
($270).
The city’s health department announced on Thursday that
both
Dr. Trang, the department’s chief inspector, acknowledged
that a number of private clinics have offered services beyond what they have
been licensed to do.
Such unlicensed operations, however, are quite difficult
to detect and owners of the health facilities can get away with mild
penalties for untruthful advertising.
According to Dr. Tran Ngoc Hai, of the Tu Du Obstetrics
Hospital, the Ministry of Health does not allow abortions of fetuses which
are over 22 weeks old, except for pregnancies with medical problems.
Doctors at Tu Du only perform abortions on three-month
pregnancies after thorough consultancy with the patients.
Dr. Hai stressed that the “hi-end” techniques in
abortion procedures which are advertised on the two above-mentioned clinics’
websites are not recognized by the health ministry.
Young girls are
pictured after having abortions at the Ho Chi Minh City-based Tu Du
Obstetrics Hospital. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Disastrous consequences of
botched abortions
Abortion seekers, particularly teenagers and young
adults, are prone to long-run physical and psychological impacts, especially
if the surgeries go wrong, or even deadly wrong, doctors warned.
Local newswire Zing cited Dr. Nguyen Giang Hong, former
head of the Obstetrics Department of District 3 Hospital, as saying that one
of her patients got her first abortion at 15.
Six months later, she came to Giang for her second
surgery.
Almost one year afterward, the girl went for the third
abortion, when her pregnancy was 14 weeks old.
What startled Dr. Hong and some other doctors was that
the girl’s ultrasonic result revealed a serious problem with her placenta and
uterus, brought about by repeated abortions.
Hong instantly sent the girl to a specialized hospital
in an attempt to save her life. The girl survived, but her chances of getting
pregnant again remain questionable.
In late 2010, the
The woman was 11 weeks pregnant but was prescribed
pregnancy-ending pills.
The patient slipped into a coma and suffered cardiac
malfunctions and profuse bleeding after taking her second dose.
She survived, but has been in a persistent vegetative
state since due to irreversible loss of blood.
Zing quoted Dr. Hong as saying further that a number of
parents sign commitment papers so that abortions can be conducted on their
daughters whose pregnancies are over seven months old.
Most of them stuck to their decisions, though Dr. Hong
and her staff tried their best to talk them out of the intention.
“The young girls suffer excruciating pain bouts for some
hours before ‘giving forced birth’ to their newborns, who are generally dead
or will be gone some minutes later,” she divulged.
“Psychological scars among young girls and their parents
are inevitable,” she noted.
Many victims of botched abortion sustain devastating
after-effects, which range from mild to severe, due to the limited capacity
and sloppiness of staff at unauthorized health facilities, local media
reported.
Some even contract HIV from such operations.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Chủ Nhật, 19 tháng 4, 2015
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