Most Americans see Pakistan as enemy






WASHINGTON: A majority of Americans do not see Pakistan as a friend to the United States, says an opinion survey released on Monday.

The survey, conducted on Nov 27, a day after a Nato air strike killed 25 Pakistani soldiers, asked US citizens: Do you consider Pakistan to be a friend or enemy of the United States?

An enemy to the US was the choice of 55 per cent respondents. Only seven pc said they considered Pakistan a friend, 26 pc did not consider Pakistan a friend or enemy and 12 pc did not have an opinion.

The surveyors, a US polling agency called Poll Positions, noted that the relationship between the United States and Pakistan had been up and down over the past years.

The US considers Pakistan a strong ally on the war on terror. However, America politicians expressed some dismay when Osama bin Laden was found living in a house near a Pakistani military intelligence facility. He had reportedly been living there for several years. Pakistan said it did not know Bin Laden was there.

The surveyors pointed out that Pakistan also had expressed anger towards the US over predator drone missile strikes that have killed civilians and members of the Pakistani military. The US says predator drone strikes are an effective tool in targeting terrorists.

Last month, the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Pakistan as part of a concerted effort to improve relations but the relationship nose-dived when US-led Nato forces blew up two Pakistani military posts near the Afghan border on Saturday, stirring countrywide protests.

The survey also shows another change in US attitudes towards Pakistan. Until recently, Pakistan was more popular among the conservative-minded Republicans apparently because of close ties between the two militaries while Democrats had strong reservations against the country.

But Sunday`s survey shows that now more Republicans see Pakistan as an enemy than Democrats or independents. Among Republicans, 70 pc consider Pakistan an enemy, 6 pc said Pakistan is a friend, 12 pc chose neither, and 12 pc had no opinion.

Democrats countered with 47 pc considering Pakistan an enemy, 11 pc said Pakistan is a friend, 30 pc said neither, and 12 pc offered no opinion. Among Independents, 45 pc looked at Pakistan as an enemy, 4 pc a friend, 37 pc said neither friend nor enemy, and 14 pc did not offer an opinion.

Poll Position`s scientific telephone survey of 1,176 registered voters nationwide was conducted on Nov 27 and has a margin of error of plus, minus three pc.

Poll results are weighted to be a representative sampling of all American adults.









Learn from Shakespeare, study tells doctors




Kenneth Heaton, a doctor at the University of Bristol in western England, trawled through all 42 of Shakespeare's major works and 46 genre-matched works by contemporaries. He found Shakespeare stood out for his ability to link physical symptoms and mental distress. —AFP Photo

Doctors should read up on Shakespeare, according to an unusual medical study that says the Bard was exceptionally skilled at spotting psychosomatic symptoms.

Kenneth Heaton, a doctor at the University of Bristol in western England, trawled through all 42 of Shakespeare’s major works and 46 genre-matched works by contemporaries.

He found Shakespeare stood out for his ability to link physical symptoms and mental distress.

Vertigo, giddiness or dizziness is expressed by five male characters in the throes of emotional disturbance, in “The Taming of the Shrew”, “Romeo and Juliet”, “Henry VI Part 1″, “Cymbeline”, and “Troilus and Cressida”.

Eleven instances of breathlessness linked to extreme emotions are found in “Two Gentlemen of Verona”, “The Rape of Lucrece”, “Venus and Adonis” and “Troilus and Cressida”.

Grief or distress is conveyed through symptoms of fatigue in “Hamlet”, “The Merchant of Venice”, “As You Like It”, “Richard II” and “Henry IV Part 2″.

Disturbed hearing at a time of mental crisis crops up in “King Lear”, “Richard II” and “King John”.

Meanwhile, coldness and faintness, emblematic of deep shock, occur in “Romeo and Juliet”, “Julius Caesar”, “Richard III” and elsewhere.

“Shakespeare’s perception that numbness and enhanced sensation can have a psychological origin seems not to have been shared by his contemporaries, none of whom included such phenomena in the works examined,” Heaton observes.

Shakespeare can help doctors today who face patients whose physical state masks underlying emotional problems, he suggests.

“Many doctors are reluctant to attribute physical symptoms to emotional disturbance, and this results in delayed diagnosis, over investigation, and inappropriate treatment,” Heaton points out.

“They could learn to be better doctors by studying Shakespeare. This is important because the so-called functional symptoms are the leading cause of general practitioner visits and of referrals to specialists.”

The study appears on Wednesday in a British publication, the Journal of Medical Humanities.
















Larger bench to hear ZAB case on Dec 12




ISLAMABAD - Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry on Monday decided to take up the reference filed by the federation under Article 186 of the Constitution for revisiting Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto case on December 12.
President Asif Ali Zardari two days ago had written a letter to the Chief Justice, requesting him for early hearing of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto reference, which is pending in the apex court since June last.
The federal government, in April this year, had filed the reference to reopen case of former prime minister and founder of Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who was hanged on April 4, 1979, in Rawalpindi. The Pakistan People Party has always termed the hanging of former prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto as judicial murder.
The government had filed the reference, reported as PLD 1979 SC pages 38-53, through Federal Law Secretary Masood Chishti. President Asif Ali Zardari had forwarded the reference to the SC under clause 1 and 2 of Article 186 of the Constitution for revisiting the case of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.
Clause 1 of the Article 186 states: “If, at any time, the President considers that it is desirable to obtain the opinion of the Supreme Court on any question of law which he considers of public importance, he may refer the question to the Supreme Court for consideration,” while clause 2 says; “The Supreme Court shall consider a question so referred and report its opinion on the question to the President”. Like the review petition on NRO, Babar Awan, who has represented the federation, failed to satisfy the court on the question of law in reference. The court has so far inquired from Babar Awan whether all the questions mentioned in the reference were the questions of law? Whether the bias and violation of fundamental rights were the questions of law? The court has noted that conclusion drawn from the facts is not the questions of law.
On June 29, 2011, the hearing was adjourned till July, after the retirement of Justice Javed Iqbal on 1st August, Justice MA Shahid Siddique on 13th October, and adhoc judge Ghulam Rabbani on 20th October the reference could not be taken up. But after the appointment of four judges, 17-member bench has been completed.
This case was earlier fixed before the Court on various dates during April to June 2011. On April 21, the learned bench of three judges presided over by the Chief Justice directed to constitute a larger bench and accordingly a larger bench was constituted.
In view of the importance of the presidential reference, senior advocates/jurists, M/s Ali Ahmed Kurd, Tariq Mehmood, Abdul Hafeez Pirzada, Fakhruddin G Ebrahim, Khalid Anwar, Makhdoom Ali Khan, SM Zafar, Aitzaz Ahsan, Zahoorul Haq, Qazi Muhammad Ashraf, and Abdul Latif Afridi were appointed as amicus curiae.”
The 17-member bench, headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, now comprise Justice Mian Shakirullah Jan, Justice Tassaduq Hussain Jillani, Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk, Justice Jawwad S Khawaja, Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali, Justice Khilji Arif Hussain, Justice Tariq Parvez, Justice Mian Saqib Nisar, Justice Sarmad Jalal Osmany and Justice Amir Hani Muslim.
Learned counsel for the parties as well as learned amicus curiae have been requested to ensure their presence for the case as it is likely to proceed on day-to-day basis from December 12-16, 2011 as the court will take a break for winter vacations from December 19-31. Notices to all concerned, including incumbent President Supreme Court Bar Association, have been issued.
Advocate General Punjab, Khawaja Haris informed the court that private complaints of Ahmed Raza Kasuri could not be traced, but the efforts were underway to find them.











Big change, small screen




THE TV screen is rapidly politicising the public. The 24/7 news channels show the actual faces of politicians, judges, criminals as well as men in uniform, including police and Rangers, on the screen.

This makes people feel the presence of remote figures in their backyard. A big change is afoot on the small screen that promises to reshape our lives.

The electronic media has influenced the national discourse. Mostly, it focuses on current issues — of a political, sectarian or an economic nature — but not on policies that carry a potential for change in the short or long term. The message is usually negative not positive, critical not promising, exclusive not inclusive, underscored by an exercise in scoring points rather than clearing the mist.

The non-policy orientation of the electronic media is combined with a pervasive leadership orientation. The PPP, PML-N, MQM, ANP, JUI and many other parties are not ‘message’ parties but ‘leader’ parties. They are known by their leaders — Asif Zardari, Nawaz Sharif, Altaf Hussain, Asfandyar Wali Khan and Fazlur Rehman. This is most typical of the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf. It has a leader with a party, not a party with a leader.

TV talk shows are amazingly popular, especially as they compete with plays at prime time. The confrontationist posturing of the holders of opposite views belonging to different persuasions adds a lot of spice to these shows. Controversy and confusion, sometimes deliberately conjured up by TV anchors, lead to a cyclical logic. Indeed, confrontation is understood as entertainment.

The issues under discussion take a heavy toll on the mental health of the larger public. There are suicide attacks on Abdullah Shah Ghazi’s mausoleum in Karachi, on a police check post or a military installation. There is diplomatic tension with Afghanistan, Iran and most recently with the US after the Nato attack on a border check post. There are grisly scenes of the dead and wounded persons such as those after the Karachi killings on the first of Muharram.

Imran Khan’s threat of a tsunami is not the only reason for the prevalent confusion. There is a tsunami of depression that is engulfing the nation too. Private news channels are under the pressure of competition. They handle news and views not merely as a camera by reporting the reality on the ground but as a projector by amplifying the objects of coverage, including bloodshed.

Unwittingly, the TV screen produces a siege mentality. There is conspiracy on air. There is a latent anti-Indianism that peaked after the 2008 Mumbai attacks and a strident anti-Americanism that reached high tide after the Abbottabad operation and again after the Nato attack last week. President Karzai’s hostile posturing about Pakistan covered by the small screen has a big effect on diplomacy.

Live coverage of the recent rallies in Lahore, Faisalabad, Peshawar and Karachi led by the old and new leaders of big and small parties has indeed electrified the public imagination by making these events look larger than life. People watch haplessly as commentators make wild speculations about the prospects of rival contenders of power in the next parliamentary elections.

But the link between rallies and votes is still missing.

The TV screen has uncovered such crimes as the killing of a citizen at point blank range by a Ranger in Karachi and the shooting of a half a dozen Central Asians by the law-enforcement agencies in Balochistan. The media managed to put the latter cases at the doorstep of the courts.

While the lone English-language TV channel covers foreign news to some extent, the Urdu channels are introverted in style and substance. The TV channels operating in regional languages lack a competitive spirit. Their professional capability, public appeal and financial health remain far from satisfactory. One can speculate that the full potential of the mass media is far from being fully realised.

The international hook-up of TV channels is unsatisfactory. While they are technologically rich, their intellectual resource base should be expanded. Bollywood continues to be a major source of entertainment news. The domestic scene in arts, literature, music and drama is covered less. The sparkling debate about party politics is not cushioned by analyses of major currents of opinion.

The computer screen has joined the TV screen in bringing people into the network society. Twitter, Facebook and blogs on the Internet have led to a revolution in connectivity. The recent memogate scandal represents the way the social media picks up news and comments from the horse’s mouth. WikiLeaks have splashed up complications in the relations among top political actors.

The anchorperson is a new addition in the political lexicon of the informed public. A majority of anchorpersons provide a ‘rightist’ perspective on things. Some whip up xenophobic feelings and conspiracy theories. As initiators of discussion and regulators of screen time, they tend to shape the dialogue along a chartered path. The ‘progressive’ minority is individually strong but collectively weak.

While the media has moved forward, political parties are stuck in outmoded ways of communicating with the public. Instead of fielding brisk, articulate and communicative persons in charge of their respective media cells, the two parties in government in Islamabad and Lahore have recently brought in relatively incoherent, unimpressive and non-communicative persons. The media has long outgrown such lame ducks.

In order to deal with the massively competitive and resourceful electronic media, ruling set-ups at all levels require a strategy to benefit from its investigative potential and immense outreach. Those who control the TV screen from behind the scenes are obliged to help their viewers break out of their insular imaginary world and move into the wider regional and global frameworks of thought and practice.








Nato attack a tragedy Obama



WASHINGTON (AFP) - President Barack Obama sees the deaths of 24 Pakistani soldiers in a Nato raid as a tragedy, the White House said Monday, but argued that crisis-wracked US-Pakistani ties were vital to both sides.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama believed Saturday’s attack which threw US-Pakistani ties into turmoil was “a tragedy,” adding that “we mourn those brave Pakistani service members that lost their lives.”
“We take this matter very seriously,” said Carney, adding that two inquiries by the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan and US Central Command would examine what took place. “As for our relationship with Pakistan, it continues to be an important cooperative relationship that is also very complicated,” Carney said.
“It is very much in America’s national security interest to maintain a cooperative relationship with Pakistan because we have shared interests in the fight against terrorism,” Carney said.
Meanwhile, the US military officials are awaiting answers from two military probes into a cross-border attack that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers over the weekend and deeply inflamed US-Pakistan ties, a US official said on Monday.
A US military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that officials conducting an initial Nato investigation into Saturday’s incident had returned to Kabul and were putting their findings together. It is unclear when the findings will be presented. In part because the facts of the incident remain murky even several days later, US Central Command will dispatch a team to conduct its own investigation, the official said. “It’s a significant event; we want to get to the bottom of what happened,” he said.
Senior US officials say that while they had been hoping that direct communication between Pakistani and Afghan military officials along the border would take root, it has not been happening. Such communication remains facilitated by the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf).














Preventing Back Pain at Work



By Lyndon Miles


Every year millions of working days are lost due to work related back pain, often caused by bad posture, strain and stress. So what can be done to avoid these factors that lead to damaging back pain at the workplace? It is crucial to know, that when bad pain occurs it is important to stay active! You need your back muscles to stay strong, and lying in bed and becoming immobile will weaken the muscles which will prolong healing.

The next stage is posture at work. The human body can only work actively in a certain position for a set amount of time before it begins to become uncomfortable. Here are some tips to make sure you are sitting correctly whilst at your work desk:

Support Your Back with Ergonomic Equipment: A lot of back pain can derive from slouching at your work desk and remaining in the same position for numerous hours. It is worth looking into getting an ergonomic chair which will support your lower back and reduce strain. These chairs are designed to be easily adjustable for different heights and weights and relieve pressure on areas that regular chairs don't. It is also worth looking into an ergonomic footrest or table. The footrest ensures your knees are level with your hips, whilst the table allows your worktop to be at the desired level, both contributing to being at the optimum position for reducing strains and pressures on the lower back.

Rest your Feet: If you don't have a footstool it is best to keep flat to the floor. Sitting cross legged will encourage slouching and is also bad for circulation.

Make Objects Easily Reachable: Make everyday objects, such as your phone and pens within easy reach. Sounds simple, but the constant reaching and twisting for objects is adding to the pressure on your back.

Keep your screen at eye level: Another important point is to keep your screen arms length away but make sure you're at eye level. Any slight crouching or straining due to the screen being too high or too low with add pressure onto your neck.

Adjusting your Chair: By law the standard office chair must be stable and adjustable. It is always best to try and remember to sit up straight and take regular intervals; this should also help improve concentration. Frequent breaks are better for back strain then a long one, as it gives your muscles a chance to relax and can avoid stiffness and tense muscles.

Exercise Regularly! Outside off work it is important to remember the benefits of exercise. They keep tense muscles moving and reduce stiffness!

Lyndon Miles authors on many subjects as well as this one. This particular article is one of a series highlighting the effects of back pain within the workplace and ways in which it can be avoided.













Easy Guide to Choose the Right Back Support for Chairs



By Shelly Cox

My job involves sitting for long hours and working at the computer. Studies suggest that sitting for long hours exerts 150% more pressure on the supporting muscles and the spine, than what is exerted when standing or lying down. The excess pressure the muscle fatigue quicker and causes back pain. As the pain increases, muscles tend to get weaker and the weight of the body is shifted the spine causing chronic back pain and also bad posture.

Whether suffering from chronic pain or general discomfort, back support for chairs is the answer to all the back problems caused because sitting.They tend to provide the necessary support required for the spine when sitting. It ensures that all the 3 curves are maintained when seated and ensures that the pressure of the body is exerted on the right muscles and not the spine. This makes sitting for long hours comfortable.

Though the basic structure of every human back is the same, there are few minute differences in the structure that would make a huge difference to the comfort. Thus, it is important to choose the right support for chairs, the pain relief is more dependent of the person's structure.

Choosing the right support for chairs can solve the problems that arise due to sitting for long hours. Some of the features that are in general necessary in all good support are -

Maintains all three curves when sitting
Sturdy
Flexible
Easy usability
Small and portable
Features that have to be matched to individual body structures would be -

Curve on the support should fit the lumbar curve of the back comfortably and cosily. A snugly fit of the curve would be a great option.

Back support for chairs that you choose can either be soft conforming (eg: Back support cushions) or Firm and springy (eg: Mesh Back support), depending of your comfort.

Firmness of the cushion is an important feature to look out for, as the alignment of the cushion to the back is dependant of the support's response to the pressure exerted by the body

The use of the support on chairs should not create more than 2-3 finger gap between your knee and the end of the seat.
If the right back support for chairs is chosen, regular use should eventually reduce the discomfort and ease the pain. Use of the wrong support for chairs can aggravate discomfort and cause more physical strain to the muscles.










Back Pain and Mattress Shopping



By James Brinkerhoff


Let's all get together on something. Shopping for a mattress is an arduous process. No one likes to lay on a mattress in front of some drooling sales person and try and be comfortable. It's always fun for me to listen to the guy say something to the effect of..."Ok...so you just want to relax and get in a position that you would sleep in". HA! Like THAT is going to happen while YOU'RE looking at me! Then there's the question of what kind of bed am I looking for? Hard, soft, squishy, memory foam, latex and on and on. I've read a million and one articles on mattress comfort and what a person should look for in a mattress and bottom line....they were all funded by people like Serta, Sealy, Spring Air, Sterns and Foster etc. So, what is one left to do?

The answer is actually less complicated than you'd think. Mattress shopping is actually less about what you know and more about what you feel. If hard as a rock/might as well be cobalt steel is comfortable to you than all the fancy studies and wording is NEVER going to change what your body thinks is comfortable. When looking for a mattress first impressions are pretty much EVERYTHING! If it's comfortable to you right then it's going to be in the future and so forth. If one mattress feels better than another then you should ALWAYS go with that idea. Don't talk yourself out of it just because the sales person uses fancy terms like, pocketed coils or latex foam or positively charged ionic fields (for real...this happened to me).

If you're shopping for a mattress due to back pain then you're in luck indeed! We've seen 80% of back pain sufferers get a better nights sleep by just following this quick list of suggestions.

1. Hard isn't necessarily better!

That's right...if a hard mattress doesn't feel comfortable to you than guess what? It's NEVER going to feel comfortable to you.

2. There's no substitute for Stretching

Lets all face it. We could all use a little more exercise. Always try and stretch out a little bit before bed. Weather that's in bed or on the floor...a little stretch goes a long ways.

3. Pillow fight!

Some times it's not your bed...some times your pillow is as old as you are and it's time for a new one.
Just do your best to relax...even if your being stared at....try a lot of beds....and go with what your body tells you feels good..









Smokers’ Corner: Positive creep




What happens to a generation of educated young people who are brought up on fantastic tales of swords and sorcery (in the name of ‘Pakistan Studies’) and at the same time on those so-called ‘building self-esteem’/self-improvement corporate seminars and books that are basically the yuppie absorption of the late 1970s/’80s ‘New Age’ nonsense about personal aura, positive vibes, et al?

Well, this way you get blobs of walking talking contradictions. What’s even worse, many of these blobs have absolutely no clue that they are a negation of what they preach. And yes, we have in our midst what is perhaps the most preachy generation ever.

They will preach ‘positive thinking’ to the cynics, calmly ignoring the fact that a cynic may just be a sceptic (like all rational, unexcitable human beings). Ah, but that would be repressing one’s emotions? A very unhealthy thing to do. It can make a person, not only a cynic, but, horror of horrors, a non-patriot, which, in Pakistan’s case, can then lead him to becoming an agnostic, or, God forbid, an atheist. In which case positive thinking must dictate affirmative action: Kill the bugger!

Of course, you must understand that this logic is usually and entirely based on assumptions. Positive thinking demands it.
Otherwise finding and investigating the facts behind assumptions can be a time-wasting exercise that makes Jack or Junaid or whoever a very dull, introverted boy on his way to becoming a cynic and thus a positive case for elimination.

Nevertheless, the swords and sorcery-meets-lets-be positive generation will shower you with great admiration if you unthinkingly and animatedly nod to whatever positivism that is trending on Twitter, facebook or YouTube. No, you’re not a sheep but … okay, you are a sheep but … like, so what?

They will shower you with love if you agree with their positivism. Especially if the positivism is about being positive in ones condemnation of what is not positive. Such as an oh-so-arrogant display of individualism.

Don’t you hate such displays? Always trying to look and sound different. Always trying to tell us that suicide bombers kill more people in Pakistan than drone attacks. And that accountability against corrupt people should not only include politicians, but military men and the judiciary too. And that Imran Khan is naive.

You are ‘paid’ (by a ‘foreign hand’) if you disagree with the positivists and patriotic if you agree. But, really, this swords and-sorcery-meets-let’s-be positive generation that leapfrog’s from Muhammad Bin Qasim to Imran Khan the ‘be positive’ corporate guru of the month in matter of a single, unrepressed sentence, can be quite a riot, really – in an entertaining sort of a way.

Take for instance how many of them responded to the UK court’s verdict on the three Pakistani spot-fixing cricketers. Last year when the spot-fixing scandal broke, positive thinking dictated that the cricketers must be supported because both international and local negative forces that are always relentlessly conspiring to blacken the country’s name were most probably behind this event as well. And thanks to many of our positive media personnel it seemed that for a while, Salman Butt, Muhammad Amir and Muhammad Asif, were about to become the male equivalents of Aafia Siddiqui (remember her of the ‘I shot the sheriff’ fame?).

But, alas, a little more than a year later when the three were proven guilty in court and sent to prison, all hell broke lose. No, there were no rallies against the ruling or condemnation of the verdict like Ms Aafia’s (another convicted felon in the US).
Instead, people began burning the three stupid cricketers’ effigies, cursing them for blackening the country’s name.

So the negative old me decided to tweet a question: How come there are stones and curses for a spot-fixer but rallies and rose petals for a killer? By killer I meant you know who.

As the positives came rushing in (on Twitter) to condemn my negative question, I kept on wondering. Wondering how come so many Pakistanis and the media are ready to pour out and passionately demand that certain corrupt cricketers or politicians be lynched, but then the same people shower praises on self-appointed defenders of the faith who commit murder, or look the other way when some other self-appointees in this respect go about their business of blowing up mosques, shrines, schools and markets?

But, then, I understand. Why disturb one’s healthy positive aura and vibe with awkward questions. Why complicate things. I mean, all this might lead to negative thinking thus cynicism, unpatriotic thoughts and perhaps even atheism, no?

One should be positive. Especially about his country, the military, our nuclear arsenal and especially the fact that we are ready to eat grass for our precious big bomb. Or rather, the poor are ready to eat grass for it.

So it is our duty to sympathise with the poor grass eaters and hang a few politicians, eliminate a few cricketers, censor a few journalists and make peace with extremists so as to at least keep the price of grass affordable for the masses who, inshallah, will vote in hoards for Mr Positive par excellence Imran Khan in the next elections, even though positive thinking dictates democracy is a sham and only a modern-day caliphate is the answer to all our problems.

That felt good. Yea, man, check out my positive vibes. Like, groovy, in a Muhammad bin Qasim kind of a way.











Side Effects Of Abortion



The side effects of abortion are serious and most commonly long lasting. Though the subject is controversial concerning when the pregnancy includes an actual life, the termination of the possible life remains. Careful consideration for religious, social, and medical concerns may lead a woman toward a more educated decision than the simple fact of not wanting responsibility of a new life. Adoption is a growing alternative to pregnancy termination. Speaking with certified professionals of religion as well as the medical community additionally aid in making the right decision for the individual situation.

The decision to approve of the actual surgical procedure should be based on the responsibility laid on the woman for terminating life as well as the physical effects of abortion as the bodys response to this action. In addition to the physical complications, a woman puts herself in danger of mental distress due to the severity of her decision. In addition to depression, a woman may experience chemical reactions due to the way in which the procedure was performed as well as the bodys unique reaction, which may be due to other medical problems that are known or unknown. The side effects of abortion may be life threatening including cancer, heart disease, and death during surgery. Putting ones body at these risks instead of giving the baby up for adoption is more often the more debilitating choice. And the mother of the child said, [As] the LORD liveth, and [as] thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee. And he arose, and followed her. (2 Kings 4:30)

Determining the health of the woman and how far along in pregnancy she is will additionally aid in making an accurate decision. Though laws differ from state to state and country to country, understanding the actual biology of human development while in the uterus aids in making a personal decision concerning when life starts. Though any Christian would state that life begins at conception, scientists and other medical professionals argue over this topic. Physical effects of abortion may even affect the social life of a woman who succeeds in this procedure. Friends and family may disapprove of this action or guilt may overcome the woman causing withdrawal from social activities. And thou shalt be secure, because there is hope; yea, thou shalt dig [about thee, and] thou shalt take thy rest in safety. (Job 11:18)

Complications include uterine hemorrhage, uterine perforation, endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease, coexistent ectopic pregnancy, asherman syndrome, and delayed sequelae. In addition, many women face mental challenges of depression and regret. Though the statistics are low of women who experience these complications, they can be deadly without any notice. For the grave cannot praise thee, death can [not] celebrate thee: they that go down into the pit cannot hope for thy truth. (Isaiah 38:18) Infections that may occur are very unlikely and commonly are due to previous health problems. The physical effects of abortion may simply be exaggerated symptoms of these problems, however any surgery would decrease the functionality of the immune system therefore putting the body in a vulnerable position in respect to bacteria and viral infection. 

In some cases the health of the mother is at risk in a pregnancy and a team of medical professionals must discuss survival of either her or her baby. A second opinion is always recommended even when the first answer is the desired answer. Additionally speaking with religious authority such as a pastor or religious counselor may help to make tough decisions if the mothers life is in danger. Finding support through local and national organizations in addition to friends, church family, and biological family may create the required support for mental and physical wellness during this difficult time. No matter what the circumstance, doing right in Gods eyes is the most important. Carrying a baby for nine months is a sacrifice a woman goes through in order to give that child life. This is a short period of time when considering that on average a human lives for 75 years. 

If a woman has already had an abortion, qualified medical professionals need to be consulted to ensure long-term health. Age and previous health history define the general risk of physical effects of abortion a woman has during and after the procedure. These side effects of abortion may not be evident until later in life when disease takes over the body and it is revealed that an error was made by the surgeon damaging surrounding organs. Likewise, a woman may develop irritating symptoms that go untreated such as loss of appetite and fatigue which really are key in diagnosing insulin problems and general immunity dysfunction. As with any type of surgery, a woman carries risk of the surgeon or her own body not responding appropriately to foreign chemicals and procedures. In addition, pregnancy may offer healing methods through the exchange of chemicals produced by increased estrogen lessening the instance of some diseases. Educating oneself about personal health issues as well as statistics about the side effects of abortion is crucial in order for a woman to make the best personal decision. If a woman has a family history of breast cancer, she increases her risk of developing this disease by going through with an abortion. Additionally a hysterectomy may be necessary following or during the procedure even in the most healthy women. In the end, in most cases, the risks outweigh the responsibility of following through with a pregnancy.















Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Share

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More