The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© KYODOJapanese government steps up efforts to care for women who miscarry
By Haruko Mera TOKYO©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© KYODO
13 Comments
Login to comment
JTC
I feel sorry for those who have had a natural Miscarriage - they should never be blamed and should have all the mental and physical support needed for such a sad situation.
That said, with recent changes in Legislation in certain countries, I hope "Miscarriage" and "Abortion" do not become intertwined. Will a Miscarriage warrant a Police investigation - subjecting you to probes into your Facebook accounts, etc. etc. That would quite literally rub salt into the wound of a real Miscarriage situation, and I hope such witch-hunting is curtailed globally.
kaimycahl
Isn't this also a "MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE" that the government has not addressed? What makes one think the government will "step up efforts to care for women who miscarry"? Mental is Mental there is no difference!
dagon
Not The Unification Church or Dentsu or any of the usual suspects.
SAME#
@savethegaijin
Sorry to hear that. I have the opposite experience with wonderful care and great OBGYN. The ones I saw spoke English and were used to foreigners so they (and their staff) were always great. Same at hospital for delivery but again I chose one recommended for the care to mothers and babies. I heard both good and bad experiences from mothers in Japan so I think it really depends where you choose to go.
fxgai
When I find myself in times of trouble, the place I go looking for help is government.
Takes all sorts don’t it
CKAI
Good. Im all for it. DO more. Take care of the moms! Especially moms struggling every day just to put food on the table to feed the kids.
virusrex
Completely indispensable measures to correct a problem that is surprisingly serious for a developed nation, it will help a lot of families to overcome something tragic and hopefully will eventually be extended to include related problems like infertility, sterility, parents being carriers of genetic defects, etc.
It is understandable that hospitals do this to solve a problem that apparently is relatively common, but it open an ethical can of worms that has to be carefully considered. For example including this fact in the informed consent for the treatment.
shogun36
how?
Are they going to wear the pregnancy belly to try to gain “perspective?”
Are they going to watch film on how to deliver a baby?
savethegaijin
I got very cruelly criticized by my first OBGYN for not coming in when I miscarried because I could have potentially "saved my baby". Basically blamed me to my face for losing a very wanted child and told me to be more responsible.
It was Sunday. Start to finish was over in a horrifying 30 minutes. And I went in Monday and waited for 5 hours because I didn't have an appointment. To be yelled at.
I have never, ever, had a good experience with an OBGYN or midwife here. One time its unfortunate, two times it's bad luck, 3, 4, 5, on and on... the system is broken. I've had 3 total miscarriages, two in the first trimester, one in the second. A healthy child afterwards. I was treated like absolute sh*t every single time.