Go Back   ISPINE.ORG Forum > Main forums > Community Support - NSR
FAQ Members List Calendar Today's Posts

Community Support - NSR Discuss Octuplets in the Main forums forums; OK, I know everyone must have an opinion on this story. IMHO, this is insane on so many levels... Q&...

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 02-09-2009, 02:33 AM
Justin's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Philadelphia
Posts: 303
Question Octuplets

OK, I know everyone must have an opinion on this story.

IMHO, this is insane on so many levels... Q&A about the Calif. octuplet mom and her children

Your thoughts?
__________________
-Justin
1994 Football Injury
1997 Snow Skiing Injury
Laminotomy L4/L5 (3.7.97--17 years old)
1999 & 2003 MVA (not at fault both times)
Grade V Tears L4/L5 & L5/L6
2-Level ProDisc® L4/L5 & L5/L6* *lumbosacral transitional vertebra (11.15.03--23 years old)
Dr. Rudolf Bertagnoli -- dr-bertagnoli.com
Pain-free for the last 4.5 yrs.
5.14.09 DSS with Dr. B.
I'm here to help. Only checking PMs currently.
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 02-09-2009, 05:17 AM
mmglobal's Avatar
Administrator
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 2,511
Default

Seems like a pretty risky thread... let's have a hornet's nest here.

OK... adding fuel to the fire...

Seems like a dysfunctional person is now a single mother with 14 children... 8 and under? Can you imagine competing for affection and attention in that household?

Sad story.
__________________
1997 MVA
2000 L4-5 Microdiscectomy/laminotomy
2001 L5-S1 Micro-d/lami
2002 L4-S1 Charite' ADR - SUCCESS!
2009 C3-C4, C5-C6-C7, T1-T2 ProDisc-C Nova
Summer 2009, more bad thoracic discs!
Life After Surgery Website
President: Global Patient Network, Inc.
Founder: www.iSpine.org
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 02-09-2009, 01:28 PM
Justin's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Philadelphia
Posts: 303
Default Good read...

This is a good read from the Journal of Bioethics and Arthur Caplan. Caplan is regarded as one of the most prominent voices in the world of bioethics (he's at UPenn.)

Quote:
Don't Blame Momma.
Today from the Philadelphia Inquirer, Arthur Caplan has published an opinion piece on the issue that has all of bioethics (and the entire country) talking: the famous (or infamous) California octuplets.

So unless you've been flying in an airplane continuously for the last 96 hours or don't own a television, you know the story, but below is Caplan's take--given only the way Arthur Caplan can give it: by giving us insight, but also telling us as a country how to get our act together so that other women can't ever get in the same predicament by falling into the wholly unregulated Wild West of the American fertility treatment system.


The column is below in its entirety because it wouldn't do it justice to excerpt it. Caplan says:

"Something has gone terribly wrong when a 33-year-old single woman - who has no home of her own, no job, and a mother who worries her daughter is "obsessed" with having children - winds up with 14 of them. And all are under age 8, including eight newborn babies now in a neonatal nursery in various states of prematurity.

Examining what exactly went wrong may shed some light on what ought to be done. If doctors cannot prevent such a shambles from recurring, then society must.

The woman in question, Nadya Suleman, lives with her parents in a small home near Los Angeles. She has had infertility problems linked to blocked Fallopian tubes. She can make eggs, but they cannot be fertilized naturally because of the blockage.

Suleman apparently used donated sperm and in vitro fertilization to create all the embryos that became her children. She underwent treatment to cause her to produce many more eggs than the normal one per month, and they were surgically removed from her body and fertilized in lab dishes. Some of the resulting embryos were put back into her body, and that is how her first six children were made.

Unhappy with only six, Suleman sought further fertility treatment and had an additional eight of her embryos defrosted and implanted. They produced the now famous octuplets who, after a Caesarean section, are in intensive care at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Bellflower, Calif. Sadly, there is no known case of octuplets in which all escaped severe disabilities.

The most obvious questions raised by this sad saga include: How did Nadya Suleman become a fertility patient? And how did she get eight embryos implanted when she already had six young children to care for in a tiny house, with no partner and no income?

Some fertility doctors would answer that it's not their job to decide how many children a person can have. Jeffrey Steinberg, medical director of the Fertility Institutes, which has clinics in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and New York City, was quoted as saying: "Who am I to say that six is the limit? There are people who like to have big families."

James Grifo, a renowned fertility specialist at New York University, had little time for those wondering why Suleman was a patient. "I don't think it's our job to tell them how many babies they're allowed to have," he reportedly said. "I am not a policeman for reproduction in the United States."

With all due respect, the idea that doctors should not set limits on who can use reproductive technology to make babies is ethically bonkers.

If someone comes to a clinic with a history of child abuse, active drug addiction, and a rap sheet with serious felonies, should the doctor simply say: "If you have the money, I will make all the babies you want"? That gives cash and carry a whole new meaning.

Doctors have an obligation to consider patients' requests for treatment, but they do not have to honor them. One very good reason not to do so is if a doctor believes that what the patient wants would put children at grave risk.

Putting eight embryos into a woman is exactly that - putting kids at grave risk. Putting eight babies into the family of a single mom already trying to cope with six other young kids, with no money and little help, is putting kids at grave risk. The doctors who allowed Nadya Suleman to receive multiple embryos engaged in grossly unethical conduct.

The other major ethical problem raised by this story is the hijacking of health-care dollars by someone acting irresponsibly.

Suleman had to know that starting a pregnancy that might create eight tiny lives was to risk killing herself, as well as killing or severely disabling one or more of the babies. Fortunately, she made it through the pregnancy. But the cost of neonatal care for her eight new children probably will exceed $1 million.

When they are discharged from intensive care, more millions of dollars in medical costs likely await, not to mention the help Suleman will need just to handle all of her children's basic needs.

Society needs to discourage mega-multiple births. And it is clear what needs to be done to accomplish that.

If the medical profession is unwilling or unable to police its own, then government needs to get involved. We already have rules governing who can get involved with adoption and foster care. Shouldn't these minimal requirements be extended to fertility treatment? And shouldn't some limit be set on how many embryos can be implanted at one time, along with some rules about what to do with embryos that no one wants to use?

Other nations, such as Britain, keep a regulatory eye on reproductive technologies and those who wish to use them, knowing their use can put kids at risk in ways that nature never envisioned. We owe the same to children born here."

Summer Johnson, PhD
Don't Blame Momma. | blog.bioethics.net
__________________
-Justin
1994 Football Injury
1997 Snow Skiing Injury
Laminotomy L4/L5 (3.7.97--17 years old)
1999 & 2003 MVA (not at fault both times)
Grade V Tears L4/L5 & L5/L6
2-Level ProDisc® L4/L5 & L5/L6* *lumbosacral transitional vertebra (11.15.03--23 years old)
Dr. Rudolf Bertagnoli -- dr-bertagnoli.com
Pain-free for the last 4.5 yrs.
5.14.09 DSS with Dr. B.
I'm here to help. Only checking PMs currently.
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 02-09-2009, 07:21 PM
dshobbies's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 1,596
Default

Infertility can and does destroy lives and marriages. The fact that medical science can help is nothing short of amazing. However, this science can and sometimes does go beyond well intentions and abuse, as in all areas of life, occurs.

You have (wo)men attempting to govern themselves and you have corruption. You have a system of freedom of religion and you have sects of pedifiles hiding behind this freedom. You have modern technology of computer science and you have viruses. You have medical science that can normalize the appearance of those born with a hairlip and you get double Z boobs or a cat face, or Michael Jackson (did I say that).

I recently read a thought for the day that was, like many other, quite profound. I'm paraphrasing; 'Man doesn't seek to be rich, just richer than his brother'. That's another way of saying that greed is all around us and more likely will always be. The strong will prey on the weak.

Is having 8 implations abuse? Yes and on so many levels it doesn't even need debate. However, knowing that there was NO liklihood of delivering 8 healthy babies, and choosing that course anyway, this ethical decision becomes a criminal act and should be prosecuted. Abuse is abuse.
__________________
3 level Prodisc adr S1-L3, Oct 12, 2005
Dr. B in Bogen, Germany
Severe nerve damage in left leg, still working on it
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 02-09-2009, 11:15 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Wayzata, Minnesota
Posts: 238
Default

It is nothing short of unconscionable. The doctor. The mother. Where does the buck stop? This woman has major life and mental health issues that 14 children are not going to correct or heal for her. (like she seems to think they will) And then if she is actually aloud to reap the benefits of this negligent act by selling a story, a tv show, whatever it is, then we are really a sick society and must blame ourselves. Remember when OJ wasn't allowed to reap the benefit from the book he wrote: So, What If I did Do It? or some such title close to that. That's what should happen here. No upswing here for her, no monetary reward for doing the unthinkable.

Cindylou
__________________
bicycle accident 6/01: 2 compression fractures @ T12-L1; vertibroplasty; 4/06: right hip labral tear & arthroscopic repair; 4/07: lumbar prodiscs @ 3 levels, L3-6 by Dr. Bertagnoli; 7/02/08: ALIF L6-S1; 7/30/08: reopened to remove bone cement, leaked onto S1 nerve root; 8/08: pulmonary embolism, double pneumonia, collapsed left lung, pleurisy, pleural effusion; ALIF fusion complete; 3/10/09: SI Joint Fusion by Dr. Stark; Jury still out.
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 02-09-2009, 11:16 PM
Gil Denis's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: jackson Wyoming
Posts: 349
Default Abuse

What the @@%$# who is going to pay for all those kids. Did she get a bail out?
Take the kids away and throw her in jail
I could just go on but will bite my lip

Gil
__________________
L5-S1 lam 1994
L2 to L5 DDD
L3 -L4 hern Dec 2007.
L4-L5 Annular fissure with mild central stenosis and moderate facet hypertrophy.
L5-S1DDDDD
L2-L3 Right-sided neural foraminal narrowing at and L3-L4 related to posterolateral hypertrophic spurs and facet hypertrophy.
C3-C4 limited DDD
9 injections Depo. P.T. 13 months 5 dose packs,
Nerve Block Injections.4 ESI S1
L5-S1 foraminotomy 09
L4-L5 Microdiscectomy 09 Reherniate 4-2010
Coflex-L Implants L4 to S1
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 02-10-2009, 02:45 AM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 331
Default

Re the mom:

She is fortunate that the children are doing so well. If you guys didn't catch it, she has been on disability for a back injury.
She was working as a psych tech, which is a pretty good job from what I understand it and was hit by a patient throwing a table. They said she has received $165,000 in disability payments according to the press.
I told my husband there is no way I could go through pregnancy now with the way my back feels.
He thought I meant to have another baby but I told him that would be out of the question. My last one was four years ago and although I wanted another one before I hurt my back, I don't now. In all my pregnancies, I had preterm labors and deliveries and it is difficult with one baby, I could not imagine eight. Premmies have a lot of bumps in the roads just to keep them healthy.

So I wonder how bad her back is. I don't know why she would want 14 children but some people just go overboard I guess.

I have my hands full with four and with the back problems it is not easy. But I am thinking if she can get disability, so can I. But now they are going to investigate her circumstances because the press won't let go of this story.
That is my two cents.

runner
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 02-10-2009, 08:08 PM
treefrog's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Raleigh, NC
Posts: 284
Default

I had heard that she got a settlement for being injured while on the job, but I wasn't aware it was for a back injury. I also wasn't clear that it was disability payments, I thought it was a one-time settlement. I also didn't know it was her parents house she was living in.

All I have to say, is when I wanted to adopt a cat from a shelter, I had to accept people coming into my home and verifying that it would be a safe place for the cat . There was also paperwork, which I can't remember all the details of. Just to say, shouldn't there have been some further investigation by someone into her living situation, at the very least? I mean how crazy that we value the well being of shelter animals more than that of children being brought into this world, or at least it appears that way.

And it certainly does seem like she has some mental issues/problems that should have been a red-flag to anyone authorizing this procedure. Certainly some cognitive dissonance going on.

I would have to agree that I don't think she should be allowed to profit from the situation. But I wouldn't have an issue with her selling her story, if the proceeds went to caring for her children. This morning I heard the snippet where she said she planned on using student loans to support herself and her children, that's just ridiculous, for multiple reasons. What's she going to do, leave the children with her mother, so she can go to school?
__________________
Cathy

46 years old. 12-15 years of intermittent pain, 2 years with constant pain.

DDD, L4-5 and L5-S1, pain confirmed by discogram.
PT, ESI's, Facet injection and block, Acupuncture - all no help.

2-level (Prodisc-L) ADR surgery with Dr. Bertagnoli, May 26, 2009.

Currently taking Opana-ER (tapering off) and oxycodone
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 02-13-2009, 01:58 PM
Justin's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Philadelphia
Posts: 303
Angry Un-freaking-believable

Un-freaking-believable ... http://www.thenadyasulemanfamily.com/
__________________
-Justin
1994 Football Injury
1997 Snow Skiing Injury
Laminotomy L4/L5 (3.7.97--17 years old)
1999 & 2003 MVA (not at fault both times)
Grade V Tears L4/L5 & L5/L6
2-Level ProDisc® L4/L5 & L5/L6* *lumbosacral transitional vertebra (11.15.03--23 years old)
Dr. Rudolf Bertagnoli -- dr-bertagnoli.com
Pain-free for the last 4.5 yrs.
5.14.09 DSS with Dr. B.
I'm here to help. Only checking PMs currently.
Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 02-13-2009, 04:04 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Harbor Springs, Michigan
Posts: 211
Default

Our society is sicker than ever mentally, physically, and spiritually. We see these manifestations daily in the news. Unfortunately, we live in the day of instant communication where, when the plane splatters in to the roof top, the cameras are rolling near instantaneously. Our society is spiritually bankrupt and, we need to get back to the basics of truly caring about our home, and communities at large. My .02.

Terry Newton
__________________
1980 ruptured L4-L5
1988 ruptured SI-L5
1990 ruptured C5-C6
1994 ruptured C6-C7
1995 Hemi-Laminectomy C5-C6, C6-C7 Mayo Clinic
Bicycle Accident 2004
MRI, EMG, Facet Injections, Epidural Blocks, Lumbar Discogram.
Stenum Hospital Surgery November 4, 2006
Prestige Disc C5-C6, C6-C7
Maverick Disc S1-L5, L4-L5
Reply With Quote
  #11 (permalink)  
Old 02-13-2009, 06:49 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Port Clinton, Ohio
Posts: 75
Default

I agree with all posts so won't add more. Am curious?? Has the doctor or clinic who was responsible for implanting the embryos been named. Haven't heard anything. I applaud the animal shelters that take the time and effort to place their animals in good homes, don't humans deserve the same? Shame on the doctor. Sandy
__________________
**Accidents, active life-style, always some back/neck pain controlled w/ibuphrofen
2004 excessive pain, x-ray, PT, MRI diagnosis cervical DDD
**PM recommended, meds, PT, massage therapy, chiropractor, injections
**Dec. 2007 numbness and weakness in left arm/thumb, x-rays, MRI, discs at C4-7 pushing on spinal cord, fusion or ADR out of country
**April 7, 2008, discogram at C3-4, surgery 4 levels, Prodisc-C, Dr. Bertagnoli, Germany
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT. The time now is 02:21 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.