Talk:Stop Forced Abortions Model Bill

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Definitions

Definitions of Medical Terms can be found at the National Library of Medicine

There you will find the following definitions


Causality (and) Multiple Causation-- The relating of causes to the effects they produce. Causes are termed necessary when they must always precede an effect and sufficient when they initiate or produce an effect. Any of several factors may be associated with the potential disease causation or outcome, including predisposing factors, enabling factors, precipitating factors, reinforcing factors, and risk factors.

Risk Factor: An aspect of personal behavior or lifestyle, environmental exposure, or inborn or inherited characteristic, which, on the basis of epidemiologic evidence, is known to be associated with a health-related condition considered important to prevent.

For the purposes of the bill, this could be modified to:
Risk Factor:
An aspect of personal behavior or lifestyle, environmental exposure, or inborn or inherited characteristic, which, on the basis of peer reviewed studies is significantly associated with complications associated with abortion.


Some others of interest

Precipitating Factor" Factors associated with the definitive onset of a disease, illness, accident, behavioral response, or course of action. Usually one factor is more important or more obviously recognizable than others, if several are involved, and one may often be regarded as "necessary". Examples include exposure to specific disease; amount or level of an infectious organism, drug, or noxious agent, etc.

etiology Used with diseases for causative agents including microorganisms and includes environmental and social factors and personal habits as contributing factors. It includes pathogenesis.


epidemiology Used with human and veterinary diseases for the distribution of disease, factors which cause disease, and the attributes of disease in defined populations; includes incidence, frequency, prevalence, endemic and epidemic outbreaks; also surveys and estimates of morbidity in geographic areas and in specified populations. Used also with geographical headings for the location of epidemiologic aspects of a disease. Excludes mortality for which "mortality" is used.

Risk and Relative Risk The probability that an event will occur. It encompasses a variety of measures of the probability of a generally unfavorable outcome.

Risk Reduction Behavior / Risk Reduction Reduction of high-risk choices and adoption of low-risk quantity and frequency alternatives.


Arguments

Following is the question abortion proponents must address.

1. Do women have a constitutional right to a cheap abortion, no matter how dangerous? Or does the state have a right to set standard of care which will allow women to hold doctors accountable when the treatment standards fail to adequately avoid predictable and/or avoidable risks and complications?