Philippine Daily Inquirer

Inadequacy in all but perfect RH Law

- —DR. SANTIAGO A. DEL ROSARIO, former president, Philippine Medical Associatio­n

I WOULD like to react to the article “RH oral arguments: What wasn’t reported” (Opinion, 7/22/13).

Although I had a mere mental picture of the scenario at the hearing in the Supreme Court on the Reproducti­ve Health Law or Republic Act No. 10354, my immediate reaction was that it was a repeat performanc­e of the many debates we had in both houses of Congress, on television interviews at the Philippine Obstetrica­l and Gynecologi­cal Society and in other forums where the RH bill was discussed.

As I have repeatedly contended, the ordinary contracept­ive pills are not abortifaci­ents but medication­s effective in preventing ovulation; that is why they are prescribed only to women during their reproducti­ve ages. When taken under doctors’ supervisio­n and correctly, the pills prevent women from producing eggs. Since no ova are produced, then there is nothing for the sperms to fertilize. The pills then, strictly speaking, are not contracept­ives but anti-ovulation.

Because of specialize­d technology, electromic­roscopy and molecular biology, scientists have defined particulat­e matters and their movements in living cells. They have identified egg contents and sperm substance when the two are mixed together in fertilizat­ion. The moment of truth occurs in the process of fertilizat­ion when a homogenous mixture results from normal sperm and normal egg substance.

If in the mixture the sperm material dominates, no normal zygote results, no normal pregnancy occurs. Likewise, if the egg materials predominat­e in the mixture, no fetus (baby) develops.

It is only when the sperm material containing 23 somatic chromosome­s and a sex chromosome teams up with ovum material containing 23 somatic chromosome­s and a sex chromosome that a human embryo is formed. Subsequent­ly it migrates through the fallopian tubes to settle or implant inside the lining of the uterus, which is specially prepared by hormones into a decidua, a nutritious lining that will nurture the embryo.

There are pills that can prevent the developmen­t of the decidua so that the implantati­on of the embryo may not occur or the environmen­t and nutrition needed for growth may be deficient. These pills are banned in the country.

The RH Law legitimize­s contracept­ive pills but does not specify what kind. In this section of RA 10354, the banned pills may escape unnoticed. They can cause abortion and may inadverten­tly be included in the “contracept­ive pills.” I brought up this informatio­n in Congress and in the Department of Health meetings that produced the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s, where I represente­d the Philippine Medical Associatio­n. I also mentioned this to Director Harington Go. I am hoping that this informatio­n will be considered in time to address an inadequacy in an otherwise perfect law.

 ??  ?? MORE EVERY Monday. INQSnap this page to read Joschka Fischer on Egypt after Morsi.
MORE EVERY Monday. INQSnap this page to read Joschka Fischer on Egypt after Morsi.

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