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One person's incredibly subjective emotional experience
but it's not is it..? it's likely to be a very similar experience for every parent ever that has had to deal with it..
I understand the point being made but sometimes science needs to know it's limits perhaps, the line being debated in this thread is clearly beyond science's ken..
anyway, I digress, I only butted in because of the inexcusable behaviour..
Pedantically everyone is guilty of the confirmation bias what with some putting more emphasis on science [and you seem to dislike fallacies 😉 ] and him putting more emphasis on the personal experience of those on wards/parents
As for appeal to emotion there is a part of that to be fair but we would be bqack at confirmation bioas if we rated that as poorer than reason [ of course I do]
I have to be honest the research seems rather specific and uses a rather crude measure of pain re ECG and a specific proprioceptive response.
It would seem to me that we could see whether the child responds to a cuddle the same as a serious kicking, hunger the same as being fed in order to test "Pain" rather than one specific type of pain.
For example it may well be the case that they do not respond to the stimulus [pain] as they need to learn to associate that sensation with the damage that occurs afterwards - for example we would not expect fire to be scary until you have been burnt- you may not even associate the next sensation of burning as pain until it gets infected and takes some time to heal etc.
The perceptual cliff offers another interesting take where kids are not scared of heights- why would they be as they have never fallen but they then learn it as they get older. They may be showing that a child learns rather than it does not feel pain until a certain time.
I am not convinced by one study alone to conclude that in all circumstances a child of that age cannot experience any PAIN - I doubt the authors are claiming that either as they did not test for this.
Case is still open from where i am sitting with some evidence for either side
I'm so angry that words fail me
I only butted in because of the inexcusable behaviour..
Insensitive, maybe, but it is definitely advantageous that decisions affecting a nation through changes to laws are guided by scientific research, rather than two blokes on a mountain biking forum, one of whom appears to have a fuse so short his words have failed him simply after reading a couple of pages of posts.
And no, yunki, my posts are absolutely nothing like the trolls you speak of. Drawing that connection only diminishes your argument further.
stevewhyte - Member
Why should I be surprised that there are so many in the pro camp regarding the murdering of babies on stw.
Unborn foetus' aren't 'babies'.
jam bo - Member
Don't be angry on my behalf. Everyone is entitled to their views.Anyhow, my boy has just learnt to blow raspberries so all is good.
someone is bored...
I had expected that perhaps bwaarp and zokes were naive teenaged boys, trolling someone under unfortunate circumstances like we hear about on the news..
If nothing else this thread has shown up some people that I would find it impossible to respect if we were to meet on the trails, simply because of their callous and disparaging treatment of a fellow forum user..I'm so angry that words fail me
You seem to be saying that just because this is a sensitive issue, we have no right to be arguing against your opinion.
but it's not is it..? it's likely to be a very similar experience for every parent ever that has had to deal with it..
Got evidence for that? Historically the medical world has made countless mistakes using 'experience' as opposed to evidence based medicine. Why should it be any different here?
insensitive, maybe, but it is definitely advantageous that decisions affecting a nation through changes to laws are guided by scientific research, rather than two blokes on a mountain biking forum, one of whom appears to have a fuse so short his words have failed him simply after reading a couple of pages of posts.And no, yunki, my posts are absolutely nothing like the trolls you speak of. Drawing that connection only diminishes your argument further.
what is my argument exactly zokes..?
I'll tell you.. as you seem to be confused..
My argument is that I find your continuing insensitivity mind bogglingly offensive..
Nothing more.. the greater issues being discussed are way above my head, although your argument is clearly not as watertight as you presume, no matter how much of a hot head I am.. who's playing politics now..? 🙄
You are however, absolutely spot on about my short fuse.. and I have a searing fury to match it
You seem to be saying that just because this is a sensitive issue, we have no right to be arguing against your opinion.
You guys are completely entitled to your opinion, and I'm completely open to it.. I have not stated otherwise and you shouldn't insinuate that I have..
What you fail to understand is that I just won't listen to another mocking derisory word from either of you without option for suitable recourse..
this is absolutely absurd.. I'm not saying that you're wrong (god forbid) just that you [i]don't know[/i]
Yunki calm down man, think of this thread as just a heated houses of parliament debate.
the greater issues being discussed are way above my head,
No they aren't. You've made a few valid points.
Bwaarp, I've never been in a NICU either, but for the puropses of balance, I am also aware of research that suggests that some of the pre-natal experiences of the baby/foetus from well before 35 weeks can have effects on the neurological development (and consequently potentially the personality traits) of the child in later life.
It has long since been accepted that right from birth, stimuli such as touch, noise, light, temperature and the 'suddenness' of those stimuli begin to affect not only the reactions and behaviour of the baby but also the completion of the wiring of the brain and by consequence one's personality, (which incidentally some researchers believe is not complete until your early 20's, but that is for another thread!). I can well understand how these processes could begin well (over 5 weeks) before birth.
And as another poster has already said, there is a great deal of 'wiggle room' in the notional 40 week gestational period from how in touch some mothers are about the timing of their periods, and the variations in size of baby and maximum fundal height of mum.
Bwaarp, I've never been in a NICU either, but for the puropses of balance, I am also aware of research that suggests that some of the pre-natal experiences of the baby/foetus from well before 35 weeks can have effects on the neurological development (and consequently potentially the personality traits) of the child in later life.It has long since been accepted that right from birth, stimuli such as touch, noise, light, temperature and the 'suddenness' of those stimuli begin to affect not only the reactions and behaviour of the baby but also the completion of the wiring of the brain and by consequence one's personality, (which incidentally some researchers believe is not complete until your early 20's, but that is for another thread!). I can well understand how these processes could begin well (over 5 weeks) before birth.
Interesting Julian. Can you point me in the direction of the research?
I would change my stance depending on the evidence if it were shown that a human foetus could feel pain before 35 weeks. Unlike Yunki I feel that good science can help to guide moral and ethical issues, I don't feel that personal experience should though. To be fair to Yunki and Jam Bo, we do not know everything there is to know about this particular issue and therefore I believe that answering these questions with better evidence is of great importance.
My real issue was not the science though but Jam Bos attitude towards it.
Unlike Yunki I feel that good science can help to guide moral and ethical issues, I don't feel that personal experience should though.
Except when the science doesn't fit with your own personal prejudices of course, in which case you ignore/discount it.
Except when the science doesn't fit with your own personal prejudices of course, in which case you ignore/discount it.
Where exactly have I done that grum? If someone can prove to me a foetus can feel pain at 12 weeks, I'll happily back down.
The whole point of this thread was that Jeremy Hunt was making an ethical opinion based on 'scientific evidence'. Where's the evidence to support re-examining the morality of the abortion limit and reducing it to 12 weeks?
Where exactly have I done that grum?
Different thread. CBA to find it now but it was by GrahamS about people making their kids fat I think.
Different thread. CBA to find it now but it was by GrahamS about people making their kids fat I think.
Oh I was mostly having a laugh, was that the diabetes and diet one? If it's the one I'm thinking about I'm not sure I was won over by the studies posted.
Your probably right, I am biased against fat people. Hence why I should probably not carry out research in the area of obesity and public health.
Interesting Julian. Can you point me in the direction of the research?
Can't remember what the one I was thinking of was called, but a quick google (bottom of first page of results) produced this:
[url= http://anes-som.ucsd.edu/VP%20Articles/Topic%20C.%20Anand.pdf ]Here you go.[/url]
... which is free to view without the need for an Athens login, has some nice pictures and graphs, and would also put foetal pain sensitivity at "only" 28-30 weeks too, as well as postulating later effects on mental health/prersonlaity.
With a five to seven week reduction, will you think about backing down now? 😉
I might consider re-evaluating the 24 week limit perhaps by a few weeks once a consensus on the issue that supports those findings has been made by leading academics in the field.
Interesting study, in no way does it support a drop to 12 weeks though.
Scienti?c data, not religious or political conviction, should guide the desperately needed research in this ?eld. In the meantime, it seems prudent to avoid pain during gestation
...yet earlier in the thread you seemed to be challenging someone's observations of pain response in a 27 week prem baby, not a 12 week foetus. ❓
Although it is generally accepted that human babies would be born larger and better developed were it not for us walking on our hind legs (to walk on your hind legs not all fours, you have to have a tougher pelvis with a smaller hole through the middle, so the offspring has to come out smaller), the paper I linked also suggests that a human newborn has the same neurological development as that of a month-old macaque monkey that is able to do all sorts of supposedly developed and independent things for itself.
Again, it really is all shades of grey isn't it?
...yet earlier in the thread you seemed to be challenging someone's observations of pain response in a 27 week prem baby, not a 12 week foetus.
No, I think you misinterpreted. I was mostly attacking the way in which he challenged that paper. Big difference.
if it were shown that a human foetus could feel pain before 35 weeks.
Shall i do my critique again ?:
They did one study that concluded one thing in relation to one stimulus. I have suggested other things that could be done easily [ if unethically] to show they respond to pain and or discomfort.
As the researchers are wise enough to know what they have and what they have note done can I ask again why you have generalised their specfic result to the general claim that they cannot feel pain
The researchers were actually quite clear about this
The results suggest that specific neural circuits necessary for discrimination between touch and nociception emerge from 35-37 weeks gestation in the human brain.
They dont even mention the word pain never mind generalise it to all forms of pain
This article was posted earlier by JulianWilson.
Pain perception requires two distinctly different components: 1) nociception the sensation of the stimuli and 2) perception with emotional reaction which is the unpleasant feeling that occurs in reaction to the noxious stimuli. These distinct components are processed by the brain in areas anatomically and physiologically distinct from one another (see Human development occurs as an analog rather than digital process.
The paper seems a little muddles at times though. I'm not sure I like it.
Wiki has a nice little summary http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neonatal_perception
Electroencephalography suggests the capacity for functional pain perception in premature infants probably does not exist before 29 or 30 weeks; this study asserted that withdrawal reflexes and changes in heart rates and hormone levels in response to invasive procedures are reflexes that do not indicate fetal pain
I'm not using this to give any weight to either side of the argument but this kind of highlights my problem with Jam Bo's line of reasoning. Just because it might look like it's in pain doesn't mean to say that it is.
Also bear in mind the unborn foetus is effectively anaesthetized. Personally I feel this is the strongest evidence against a foetus feeling pain.
He and his team detected the presence of such chemicals as adenosine, pregnanolone, and prostaglandin-D2 in both human and animal fetuses, indicating that the fetus is both sedated and anesthetized in the womb. These chemicals are oxidized with the newborn's first few breaths and washed out of the tissues, allowing consciousness to occur. If the fetus is asleep throughout gestation then the possibility of fetal pain is greatly minimized.[7] “A fetus,” Mellor told the NYTimes, “is not a baby who just hasn’t been born yet.”
It's still open to debate though.
Wiki has a nice little summary
...and there I was thinking you were angling for the scientific high ground on this thread. 😛
I'm just using it for laymen, it has a few links to some half-decent articles.
Not everyone has access to journals through Athens or interesting and reliable articles through a subscription to New Scientist, I do but I don't think Junkyard does?
I thought the unspoken rule on here was "find out what you want to argue about in Wiki but never ever let on to the rest of the thread that you found it there". 😆
Pfffft, I like open source/free access as do some of my old lecturers. There's sometimes to much elitism in academics, if it's good for giving people a general idea of the debate then why not link them to wiki?
Yes, I'd be murdered if I did that in a thesis - but this is a forum and some people seem curious enough (like Junkyard) to think about the topic in a critical manner so I believe it's appropriate.
Are you still a biomedical student bwaarp?
Niet, doing a distance learning Msc. Why?
bwaarp - MemberYunki calm down man, think of this thread as just a heated houses of parliament debate.
Yes, I'd be murdered if I did that in a thesis - but this is a forum and some people seem curious enough (like Junkyard) to think about the topic in a critical manner so I believe it's appropriate.
Pick one and stick to it please. 😉
Oh bog off Julian lol
I just get wound up by intellectual laziness (appeal to emotion etc). I don't mind people actually thinking about the research and debating it.
So I take it we are out of the "rumbuctuous dispatch box sparring" now then? 😀
Of course I often use google/wiki as 'signposting' (for myself or my patients), as do a number of my professional colleagues, as much as it pains us to admit it.
Bwaarp, speaking as a clinician, I think it is essential to be able to understand and "adjust for" intellectual laziness, but if you are going to making a career of this, you will do well if you know when it is pragmatic to sail a tricky course through this sort of stuff whilst holding your principles to your chest like a fragile infant, rather than throwing more and more hard science at it. Keeping fallible human beings interested and engaged (as opposed to bored and alienated/enraged) is half the battle of research IMHO.
but I don't think Junkyard does
I dont have access to anything that is not free
I agree it is interesting[ thanks for the flattery] but it is like adulthood - we may draw an arbitrary line at 18[ or wherever] but it is not like it really means anything as it is a constant gradual development rather than some rapid leap over a day or the night you turn 18 or from 28 weeks to 28 weeks and one day.
i did actually read your links but, as i am no expert in this filed, it was beyond me in general ,so Wiki is fine whatever the snobs think 😉
Edited for the sake of the thread
I agree it is interesting[ thanks for the flattery] but it is like adulthood - we may draw an arbitrary line at 18[ or wherever] but it is not like it really means anything as it is a constant gradual development rather than some rapid leap over a day or the night you turn 18 or from 28 weeks to 28 weeks and one day.
I'm in complete agreement with you on this, what we need to know is the point that guarantees 100 percent or at least 99.99999999999 percent of foetuses won't feel pain during an abortion.
You've shown a good awareness of the issue being discussed to the point that I don't feel the topic is 'beyond' you. You just may not have the time to really develop a good understanding of Biology.
Honestly the only thing that winds me up are people that don't want to know or won't listen to those that have spent countless hours of their lives trying to know.
In which case, I'd respectfully suggest you see someone with medical qualifications then, lest said searing fury occur when you're driving or in some other position where you might do someone harm.Unless it's all just keyboard warrior show
Respectfully Zokes, lets leave it at that shall we? We could have an interesting discussion, it'd be nice if someone could post some good scientific data or a well thought out ethical viewpoint before the thread get's locked!
If we could, my cynicism in humanity might be lifted a little!
bwaarp - hokydoke.
I'll have a poke about the literature when I get to work. As you've said though, it's less the case of what's in the literature, more the manner in which it appears to be rejected "because, IME/O...."
IME/O is not a good way to define policy, no matter what the subject matter. Peer reviewed scientific results are a much better place to start.
Thanks man. I miss Oxford (going back and fourth between a small town and oxford currently) so need some reasonably intelligent discussion to keep me sane - having others challenge my point of view is how I practice my own critical thinking and develop my own ideas further.
Everyone should be allowed their point of view, just keep in reasoned guys. Don't just come in and say "well this or that is wrong....the end" (either end of the abortion spectrum). State your case and give some reasoned philosophy or evidence to back it up.
Poking fun at each other makes things entertaining as well, just don't get so heated up in offence or become so offensive the report button is pressed a dozen times. I'm guilty of this but I'm trying hard not to be a dick, it's hard sometimes and I'm used to forums that allowed out right trolling for the hilarity.
Given that lots of legislation allows for philosophical debate when being framed, what is special about the timeframe for allowing the termination of a foetus that means it should be done based on scientific data only?