Last modified on April 9, 2019, at 04:55

Abortion doctors

Abortion doctors are physicians that carry out abortions. They tend to fall into one of three categories:

  • Ob/gyns who perform abortions on their own patients
  • Abortion specialists who perform primarily abortions at a local practice
  • "Circuit riders" who travel, often from state to state, to perform abortions at freestanding facilities

The first category is rare, though it is difficult to estimate how rare. Ninety percent of abortions are performed in freestanding outpatient facilities dedicated to abortion,[1] but how many of the remaining 10% are performed on patients with whom the doctor has an existing relationship, versus how many are performed by abortion specialists, is unclear.

Demographics

Abortion doctors tend to be older than other practitioners. According to abortion researcher David Grimes, 59% of ob/gyns age 65 and older admit that they perform abortions, while only 28% of ob/gyns age 50 and younger do.[2] More than half of practicing abortion doctors are over the age of 50,[3] compared to the general population of physicians, in which only about 34% are over age 55.[4]

Abortion doctors also tend to be male, though the exact proportion is difficult to determine. Abortion Clinics Online. for example, lists 19 facilities with female abortionists, out of over 239 facilities, which means that slightly less than 8% of the advertising facilities offer female physicians. In the US as a whole, about 33% of doctors are women[5] The paucity of female abortion practitioners is even more striking when you note that the majority of ob/gyns, the specialty from which abortionists would most logically be recruited, are female.[6]

Qualifications

Any licensed physician can perform abortions in the United States. High-profile abortionist Robert Crist is an ob/gyn,[7] as were troubled abortionists Moshe Hachamovitch[8] and John Biskind.[9] Abortion entrepreneur Steven Chase Brigham, on the other hand, is a specialist in internal medicine.[10] LeRoy Carhart, who challenged the partial birth abortion ban, is a general practitioner.[11] Troubled California abortionist and clinic owner/operator Leo Kenneally had no specialization.[12] Bruce Steir, who was charged with murder after one of his abortion patients bled to death in the car on the way home, had no specialty and no board certifications.[13]

Motives

Only anecdotal information is available on why doctors decide to perform abortions. Some samples include:

  • Canadian abortionist Garson "Gary" Romalis credits seeing women suffer and die from criminal and self-induced abortions as his motivation for performing abortions legally and therefore, presumably, safely.[14]
  • Notorious Kansas late-term abortionist George Tiller reported mixed motives: honoring the memory of his late father, who had done abortions in his own practice, and the oft-cited motive of wanting to spare women injury or death from criminal abortions.[15]
  • Abortionist Martin Haskell, who popularized D&X (or "partial birth abortion"), did an internship in anesthesia, and intended to go into emergency medicine. But, he said, he didn't think that would leave room for him to make a name for himself professionally. After taking a part-time job in an abortion clinic, he thought he could make significant improvements in how abortion was practiced, and thus shifted his focus.[16]
  • Chatoor Bisal Singh, who made the news when he botched two abortions, one of them fatally,[17] told the Miami Herald that he didn't usually work at the Dadeland abortion facility, but was "strapped for cash" and agreed to fill in for abortionist Robert Kast while he was away. Singh described himself as "not an abortionist, just an honest, easygoing guy looking for something temporary."[18]
  • Former abortionist Anthony Levatino performed abortions on his patients as an ob/gyn because he'd been trained to do so and, until his conversion to the pro-life cause, simply saw it as a treatment doctors provided as their patients requested it[19]

Lucrative opportunity for Physician with progressive pro-choice women’s centers. No on-call responsibility. Any specialty will be considered. All MDs/ODs welcome (including GPs, FMGs and residents). No experience necessary, we will train. Flexible Schedules to accommodate your needs. Great opportunity for MDs in private practice who wish to supplement their incomes, or for doctors seeking a Full-time lucrative opportunity.[22]

References

  1. Emily Bazelon, "The New Abortion Providers", New York Times, July 14, 2010
  2. David Grimes, "Clinicians who provide abortions: the thinning ranks", Obstetrics and Gynecology, October 1992
  3. Medical Students for Choice
  4. "U.S. Physician Shortage Particularly Affects Rural Hospitals", Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, February 26, 2008
  5. Catherine Arnst, "Are There Too Many Women Doctors?", Bloomberg Businessweek, April 17, 2008
  6. Mary Hegarty Nowlan, "Women doctors, their ranks growing, transform medicine", Boston Globe, October 2, 2006
  7. Texas Medical Board
  8. Texas Medical Board
  9. Arizona Medical Board
  10. New Jersey Medical Board
  11. Iowa Medical Board
  12. California Medical Board
  13. California Medical Board
  14. "Why I am an abortion doctor", National Post, February 3, 2008
  15. George Tiller at Wikipedia
  16. "https://www.nrlc.org/abortion/fetal_pain/Haskell%20Cincinnati%20Medicine.pdf", Cincinnati Medicine, Fall 1993
  17. Christina Dunigan, "Tea and Sympathy", RealChoice, April 9, 2001
  18. Miami Herald, September 17, 1989
  19. Anthony Levatino, Meet the Abortion Providers, Pro-Life Action League
  20. State of New York Department of Health State Board for Professional Medical Conduct, Statement of Charges in the matter of Steven Chase Brigham, January 4, 1994
  21. Marie McCullough, "Doctor's four-state abortion business under investigation", Philadelphia Enquirer, September 3, 2010
  22. Job posting, American Women's Center

See also