When I was growing up, seeing people with Down syndrome was common, and as a Special Olympics volunteer I was touched by how much they loved life. But today, at least 90 percent of women expecting a Down syndrome baby get an abortion, according to journals such as the American Journal of Medical Genetics. As in-utero screening has advanced, terminating Down syndrome pregnancies has become almost expected.
But should it be? Or are we as families and a society losing something important if we become a nation of more and more perfect people, preventing those with even the most livable disabilities from being born? As we get further away from recognizing that everyone is precious no matter their handicaps, we become less compassionate and accommodating toward those who are imperfect. And that makes it harder and harder parents to visualize how they could possibly navigate life with a Down syndrome child.
Forty years ago, that was easy to visualize. And those parents discovered that the loving, happy nature of most Down syndrome children was not a burden but a joy – to the family and society. Today, we need to get back to encouraging and supporting more women in keeping those babies – with everything from tax breaks to easier access to special services. Women should never be made to feel like they do today: that they really have no other choice but to terminate the pregnancy, simply because they can’t fathom how to move forward.
When Diana Lawler, a mom I know, discovered one child would be a Down syndrome son, she and her husband also adopted a Down syndrome daughter. She believes we should better encourage Down syndrome parents, saying “These kids have added so much to our family. My husband says God makes angels out of that extra chromosome. My other children get frustrated with them, sure. But I feel like in their lives this will be a plus; my son and daughter will never perform like other people, but my other kids love them unconditionally. It makes me sad that we are removing this element from our society. Down syndrome is an easy disability, comparatively, and the kids are so loving. They will teach you so much more than a ‘normal’ child.”
Should we do more to encourage women to keep Down syndrome babies?
My friend Susan brought it up during a coffee break at the center where we trained developmentally disabled adults. She said to me, “It would make sense for us to wind up with Down syndrome children someday. We’d know what to do.”
I was startled, but thought: Susan might be right, given what we did for a living. Of course, life doesn’t work that way, and other mothers have those babies, those challenges.
I understand Shaunti’s fervent anti-abortion stance, yet her odd combo platter of tax breaks and increased special programs wouldn’t affect the decision-making of any distraught, pregnant woman. And if you agree with her that raising a Down syndrome (DS) child to adulthood was easier to “visualize” 40 years ago, I’d like to buy you a time machine.
Throughout my 20s, I worked with developmentally disabled adults. Many had been shuttered away their whole childhoods or been warehoused alongside mentally ill patients, still burdened with behaviors that were learned from those peers. When I began this work in 1983, the median age of death among DS people was 25 years old. Before 1975, only one of every five children with a significant disability was even educated in our school system.
The truth is, the best argument for raising a Down syndrome child is all around us, right now. How far we’ve come, placing disabled kids in most mainstream educational environments, from Brownie troops to your average high school. It’s now standard issue to see a DS adult helping out at your local grocery or hospital. And while it is true that in-utero screening has increased terminations, Down syndrome is hardly being eradicated. The most recent CDC study points out that the number of DS babies born in the U.S. actually rose from 1,676 in 1996 to 2,085 in 2006, and other studies put the annual birthrate at much higher numbers.
So why are many women terminating these pregnancies? Perhaps it’s because life hands us so many unexpected difficulties, few want to take on the expected ones. Whatever the reason, I am only sure of this: deciding to keep or terminate a pregnancy is often a difficult choice. It is a choice that should be preserved.
159 comments Add your comment
Lyrazel
April 3rd, 2009
12:39 pm
Why is life so friggin hard?
Why is it Friday and no one told a joke yet?
are we the joke?
Morgan-LynnGriggs Lamberth
April 3rd, 2009
12:39 pm
Folks, I donate to charities. I encourage everyone to do so, but such only pays much,much less than government.I encourage others to find in themselves the empathy to help defeat global abject poverty as does the ethicist Peter Singer.
No, I made the valid distinction between someone like Hawking and those dear Gale notes.
Lyrazel makes the valid case for abortions, but I emphasize the common meeting-ground of social services.
Lyrazel
April 3rd, 2009
12:37 pm
Grunt! This takes all my fun away!
USinUK
April 3rd, 2009
12:37 pm
GtG –
“EXAT: Cherry Blossums Still in bloom!”
woowoo!! then, make sure you get to the Tidal Basin FIRST THING!! seriously, don’t unpack!!
oh, that’s another thing – the Monuments by Moonlight tour (departs from Union Stn) is fantastic!! The Iwo Jima monument is beautifulat night – and you get a fantastic view of the city … I don’t know if they include the new monument to the airforce (which looks like 2 giant tusks poking out of the ground, but that’s just my opinion)
The Pentagon has also opened a new garden dedicated to those who died on 9/11 – I’m not sure it’s open to the public, but it’s worth a try.
when do you head out?
Gandalf, the White!
April 3rd, 2009
12:32 pm
Oh, I will thank you for giving me the Barry-Bien. I like that! Thanks Dr. Dum Bass!
Gandalf, the White!
April 3rd, 2009
12:30 pm
Hey Dr Dum Bass! Do us all a favor and STFU! PLEASE! You are just an educated idiot. They can put lipstick on a pig it seems, but it’s still a pig. Your name sound funny!
Morgan-LynnGriggs Lamberth
April 3rd, 2009
12:29 pm
Gandalf, no offense as you take no offense at my name-calling[ I am sincere, not sarcastic for my part.].
Yet, you just are braying without any evidence whatsoever. So, you think that honest, hard-working Americans and their children in bad times for them are parasites as Herbert Spencer and Ayn Rand bleated?
One cannot reason with such as you who revel in your nescience, your unfounded accusations!
Let us have rationl comments with evidence!
Hasta luego.
Gandalf, the White!
April 3rd, 2009
12:28 pm
Why do you hyphenate everything! Barry-Bien is exactly like saying Liar-Fool, or I don’t give money to charity – neither do I. Both wouldn’t be invited to a BBQ at the Gandalf ranch. Why? Because they suck!
Morgan-LynnGriggs Lamberth
April 3rd, 2009
12:16 pm
USinUK, thanks.
Actually, I did post here months ago. For some reason, I didn’t receive newsletters, so, I failed to post until now. I was also busy proclaiming the evangel of rationalism world wide in different languages.
Also my self-esteem is increasing by answering opponents and noting what some book and essay writers opine that is false. My fingers are dyslexic!
I encourage true skepticism from a background of knowledge rather than from the argument from incredulity as reactionaries make.I urge everyone to be fallibilistic- to know that one might be mistaken.
I name-call but do not use ad hominems,using the distinction that the former is only to the person whilst the latter uses the person to argue erroneously against her position.
Gandalf, the White!
April 3rd, 2009
12:10 pm
Dr. Dum Bass! You are walking fool factory! Rational is one thing you are not, nor shall ever be. Too much time spent in those ivy covered walls have given you the mental disorder of liberalism.
Why did you capitolize “Greater Society”? Because you can’t cure stupid. Liberty1? is that a code for socialism? Please no longer respond to my posts. I have no time to listen to such an ill educated Dr. of dumbness. Go talk to you liberal friends. I am sure they all are not eating meat, driving Priusi, dating same sex cuz it’s cool and generally bothering every red blood liberty loving american along the way. (No Offense
! )