Jul. 10th, 2006

*meep*

Jul. 10th, 2006 05:54 pm
krazykitkat: (need my mummy (GGs))
Really strange. At work, E came back from lunch with her pretty much empty soup mug. I got periodic whiffs of it (tomato soup) and started feeling sick. I had to leave at one point because I thought I was going to throw up. When I mentioned it, E took it away and washed it out.

But still felt sick, and was quite hot and my head felt funny. I left halfway through my shift. Feeling a bit better now, but I'm still smelling it at times and my stomach complains. I've tried sniffing eucalyptus oil, eating different tasting things...

Never reacted to a smell like this before.

*meep*

Jul. 10th, 2006 05:54 pm
krazykitkat: (need my mummy (GGs))
Really strange. At work, E came back from lunch with her pretty much empty soup mug. I got periodic whiffs of it (tomato soup) and started feeling sick. I had to leave at one point because I thought I was going to throw up. When I mentioned it, E took it away and washed it out.

But still felt sick, and was quite hot and my head felt funny. I left halfway through my shift. Feeling a bit better now, but I'm still smelling it at times and my stomach complains. I've tried sniffing eucalyptus oil, eating different tasting things...

Never reacted to a smell like this before.
krazykitkat: (bite me (10 things I hate about you))
A disturbing article from The New England Journal of Medicine:

Roe versus Reality — Abortion and Women's Health

In the United States, nearly 20 percent of hospital beds are in facilities with religious affiliations, most of which prohibit physicians from providing abortions. According to the Guttmacher Institute, although nationwide about 1 in 14 abortions is sought for health reasons, only two hospitals in Nebraska offer pregnancy terminations, and they do so only under rare circumstances, such as intrauterine fetal death; each of these hospitals performs fewer than 10 pregnancy terminations per year. Nevertheless, in 2004, women from many other states traveled to Nebraska for abortions — at Carhart's clinic. Occasionally, when a hospital refuses, Carhart is asked to terminate a pregnancy that threatens a woman's health. In a recent case, a woman with severe pregnancy-associated renal failure traveled 200 miles by ambulance for an abortion. She arrived with her hospital identification bracelet and an intravenous line in place, underwent the procedure, and was shipped back to her hospital bed.

Similar events have occurred in many other states. In 1998, the Louisiana State University Medical Center in Shreveport refused to provide an abortion for Michelle Lee, a woman with cardiomyopathy who was on the waiting list for a heart transplant, despite her cardiologist's warning that the pregnancy might kill her. Hospital policy dictated that to qualify for an abortion, a woman's risk of dying had to be greater than 50 percent if her pregnancy was carried to term; a committee of physicians ruled that Lee did not meet this criterion. Since her cardiomyopathy made an outpatient abortion too dangerous, she traveled 100 miles to Texas by ambulance to have her pregnancy terminated.



and they do so only under rare circumstances, such as intrauterine fetal death - why is that even classed as a termination? The fetus is already dead. Do they class D&Cs after a miscarriage as a termination?
krazykitkat: (bite me (10 things I hate about you))
A disturbing article from The New England Journal of Medicine:

Roe versus Reality — Abortion and Women's Health

In the United States, nearly 20 percent of hospital beds are in facilities with religious affiliations, most of which prohibit physicians from providing abortions. According to the Guttmacher Institute, although nationwide about 1 in 14 abortions is sought for health reasons, only two hospitals in Nebraska offer pregnancy terminations, and they do so only under rare circumstances, such as intrauterine fetal death; each of these hospitals performs fewer than 10 pregnancy terminations per year. Nevertheless, in 2004, women from many other states traveled to Nebraska for abortions — at Carhart's clinic. Occasionally, when a hospital refuses, Carhart is asked to terminate a pregnancy that threatens a woman's health. In a recent case, a woman with severe pregnancy-associated renal failure traveled 200 miles by ambulance for an abortion. She arrived with her hospital identification bracelet and an intravenous line in place, underwent the procedure, and was shipped back to her hospital bed.

Similar events have occurred in many other states. In 1998, the Louisiana State University Medical Center in Shreveport refused to provide an abortion for Michelle Lee, a woman with cardiomyopathy who was on the waiting list for a heart transplant, despite her cardiologist's warning that the pregnancy might kill her. Hospital policy dictated that to qualify for an abortion, a woman's risk of dying had to be greater than 50 percent if her pregnancy was carried to term; a committee of physicians ruled that Lee did not meet this criterion. Since her cardiomyopathy made an outpatient abortion too dangerous, she traveled 100 miles to Texas by ambulance to have her pregnancy terminated.



and they do so only under rare circumstances, such as intrauterine fetal death - why is that even classed as a termination? The fetus is already dead. Do they class D&Cs after a miscarriage as a termination?

July 2015

S M T W T F S
   1234
5678910 11
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags