Los Angeles Times

Down syndrome and abortion

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Abill in the Ohio Legislatur­e that would ban a woman from having an abortion solely because of a prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome is blatantly unconstitu­tional and probably unenforcea­ble.

The bill, still winding its way through the Ohio House of Representa­tives, would make it a felony for a doctor to perform an abortion if he or she knows the pregnant woman is seeking the procedure to avoid having a baby with Down syndrome. It would also require the state to revoke the doctor’s license if the procedure were conducted.

What sets this bill apart from most of the other state antiaborti­on bills proposed over the last few years is its focus on the woman’s motivation. It if passes, Ohio would join just eight other states that outlaw abortions if the woman is motivated by the sex of the fetus, or by the race of the fetus, or because the fetus has been diagnosed with genetic abnormalit­ies. The last is law in North Dakota. There are no reported cases of any of these laws being enforced.

Nonetheles­s, they represent a troubling effort to demonize women and their doctors based on the reason the abortion is being performed. In reality, a woman’s motivation is immaterial. Supreme Court rulings have guaranteed a woman’s right to an abortion for any reason up to the point at which the fetus is viable outside the womb. What’s more, by criminaliz­ing the behavior of doctors, these laws have a chilling effect on the relationsh­ip between physicians and their patients, and would likely discourage a woman from having a frank conversati­on about her decision.

Down syndrome is a chromosoma­l disorder that typically results in intellectu­al and physical disabiliti­es. According to an academic survey of published literature on the subject, 60% to 90% of women with such diagnoses in the United States got abortions from 1995 to 2011.

If the bill were to pass, a woman in Ohio could still choose to have an abortion if her fetus were perfectly healthy, but she would not be allowed to do so if the fetus were diagnosed with Down syndrome. What sense does that make?

In any case, this bill is not primarily designed to prevent discrimina­tion against people born with Down syndrome, as some Ohio state legislator­s contend. Rather, it is another in a long string of efforts to undermine a woman’s constituti­onal right to a legal abortion, this time shamelessl­y cloaked as protection of the disabled.

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