Irish judges considered arguments on Tuesday over whether a
brain-dead pregnant woman should be kept on life support to give her
17-week-old fetus a chance at life, a case that has reignited debate
over Ireland’s abortion ban.
Five groups of lawyers representing the woman, her fetus, her
parents, her partner and the hospital are taking turns presenting their
cases to the Dublin high court. A specially convened three-judge panel
may issue a ruling later Tuesday that could, in turn, be appealed to the
nation’s highest Supreme Court.
“Time is of the essence,” the high court president, justice Nicholas Kearns, told the court.
At issue is the Irish constitution’s requirement that the life of the
woman and of the fetus should enjoy equal protection under the law. In
the past, Irish hospitals have kept pregnant women on life support even
after they suffered irreversible loss of brain function in hopes of
saving the fetus. In the two most recently documented cases, in 2001 and
2003, the fetus died in the womb after a week or two.
In this case, the parents and partner of the woman have filed lawsuits asking for the hospital to switch off her life support.
Lawyers for the hospital say the woman is already clinically dead,
but they fear a lawsuit if they end the artificial operation of her
circulatory and respiratory systems, essential for the fetus’ immediate
survival. Irish medical practice suggests that, if legally ordered to
sustain the woman’s life functions, the hospital would attempt to keep
the fetus alive for potentially another 17 weeks before delivery.
Irish doctors have appealed for decades for clearer legal guidelines
on when they may terminate a pregnancy. Irish law currently permits this
only when deemed necessary to save the woman’s own life. An estimated
4,000 Irishwomen travel to neighboring England each year for abortions.
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