Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Exit poll: The post referendum thread. No electioneering.

Options
1179180182184185247

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 1,726 ✭✭✭It wasnt me123


    erica74 wrote: »
    Anyone in McGrath's constituency should lobby him about not delaying the new legislation. It has been 35 years, we've waited long enough.......

    Done, I have just emailed his office, they are a very efficient machine and I expect a reply today (but I'm working so may not be able to report back today).

    He is an astute politician and he knows Tipperary (and Newcastle) voted Yes so hopefully he won't be a bo**ix.

    I hope the Together for Yes people are still around to placard the offices of the TDs holding up this very important legislation.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    The UK has 50 years experience in providing abortion services.
    They perform close to 190,000 a year.
    Many are performed at clinics such as Marie Stopes.
    These are run by professionals in the field with decades and decades of experience.
    More importantly the abortion services industry is highly regulated with significant oversight.

    And yet despite all this, there are many problems with the industry in the UK.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4783694/Nearly-400-botched-abortions-two-months-Marie-Stopes.html

    So you think we are going to hit the ground running over here, what with our record of abysmal healthcare and laughable oversight. You only have to look at the recent cervical check scandal to see how transparency and oversight is handled.

    So by all means run with abortion here.

    If my partner ever required an abortion in extreme circumstances such as FFA I would still be heading to the UK to get it carried out. I wouldn't trust the Irish healthcare system or grossly incompetent politicians like Harris and Varadkar who are still ducking and diving when it comes to dealing with the women of the cervical checking scandal.


  • Registered Users Posts: 40,176 ✭✭✭✭ohnonotgmail


    The UK has 50 years experience in providing abortion services.
    They perform close to 190,000 a year.
    Many are performed at clinics such as Marie Stopes.
    These are run by professionals in the field with decades and decades of experience.
    More importantly the abortion services industry is highly regulated with significant oversight.

    And yet despite all this, there are many problems with the industry in the UK.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4783694/Nearly-400-botched-abortions-two-months-Marie-Stopes.html

    So you think we are going to hit the ground running over here, what with our record of abysmal healthcare and laughable oversight. You only have to look at the recent cervical check scandal to see how transparency and oversight is handled.

    So by all means run with abortion here.

    If my partner ever required an abortion in extreme circumstances such as FFA I would still be heading to the UK to get it carried out. I wouldn't trust the Irish healthcare system or grossly incompetent politicians like Harris and Varadkar who are still ducking and diving when it comes to dealing with the women of the cervical checking scandal.


    if your partner was pregnant would you trust the irish health service to deliver that baby?


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,039 ✭✭✭✭retro:electro


    Wait, before you go. Didn’t you just say in the thread about veils being banned in Denmark that everyone should respect other people’s choices and to “stop interfering and putting your values on” other people. So where do you think you have a right or a say over my womb? My life? My health? My unborn child?

    Gospel according to Grace
    Forced womb removal: okay
    Forced veil removal: not okay


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,458 ✭✭✭✭ELM327


    Gospel according to Grace
    Forced womb removal: okay
    Forced veil removal: not okay


    enforced pregnancy - ok
    termination - not ok
    help once the child is born - none, resort to slut shaming

    Glory to you, oh grace.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    if your partner was pregnant would you trust the irish health service to deliver that baby?

    Of course. Because the Irish health service has vast experience in delivering babies.

    We have next to no experience of providing abortions. We don't have the infrastructure around oversight for starters.

    We would be starting from scratch. It would be trial and error.

    If nothing else I am looking forward to seeing how this "experiment" goes.

    Some more points from the Marie Stopes report.
    What the inspectors found
    Some 373 failed abortions at clinics over two months.
    Eleven patients taken as an emergency to hospital between October and December 2016.
    A nurse at a Manchester clinic had no registration.
    Consent for an abortion was obtained from a patient only after her pregnancy had been terminated.
    No system for checking nurses’ performance.
    Staff in Essex ignored advice from inspectors to be trained about female genital mutilation, child sexual exploitation, and anti-radicalisation schemes.
    A new managing director left just two months after starting in January.
    Key jobs in infection control, safety and medical director left unfilled.
    No improved checks to combat risk of infection.
    Delays of up to a month in providing abortions.
    Staff not trained to identify complications in scans


    The last two are keys ones for me.

    If these issues happened in the UK which has decades of experience on abortions, its going to happen here too.


  • Registered Users Posts: 40,176 ✭✭✭✭ohnonotgmail


    Of course. Because the Irish health service has vast experience in delivering babies.

    We have next to no experience of providing abortions. We don't have the infrastructure around oversight for starters.

    We would be starting from scratch. It would be trial and error.

    If nothing else I am looking forward to seeing how this "experiment" goes.

    Some more points from the Marie Stopes report.



    The last two are keys ones for me.

    If these issues happened in the UK which has decades of experience on abortions, its going to happen here too.

    No trial and error required. You think that OBGYNs are not trained to perform them? That they are a difficult procedure? The procedure is already performed here. This is just more pointless scaremongering.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    Of course. Because the Irish health service has vast experience in delivering babies.

    Nah, I met be wrong. We never have newly qualified consultants or midwives in Ireland.
    Delays of up to a month in providing abortions.
    Staff not trained to identify complications in scans
    The last two are keys ones for me.

    If these issues happened in the UK which has decades of experience on abortions, its going to happen here too.

    Training is a minor issue. Ireland adheres to industry standards for medical training.

    Delays...simple to handle. Train more staff.


    It's beyond the stage of ridiculous now. I'm not going to trust dentists because there may be a queue....I'll go to the UK instead.


  • Posts: 5,917 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    The UK has 50 years experience in providing abortion services.
    They perform close to 190,000 a year.
    Many are performed at clinics such as Marie Stopes.
    These are run by professionals in the field with decades and decades of experience.
    More importantly the abortion services industry is highly regulated with significant oversight.

    And yet despite all this, there are many problems with the industry in the UK.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4783694/Nearly-400-botched-abortions-two-months-Marie-Stopes.html

    So you think we are going to hit the ground running over here, what with our record of abysmal healthcare and laughable oversight. You only have to look at the recent cervical check scandal to see how transparency and oversight is handled.

    So by all means run with abortion here.

    If my partner ever required an abortion in extreme circumstances such as FFA I would still be heading to the UK to get it carried out. I wouldn't trust the Irish healthcare system or grossly incompetent politicians like Harris and Varadkar who are still ducking and diving when it comes to dealing with the women of the cervical checking scandal.

    So you would go to a country where you say in your opinion the laws regarding access to abortion services are routinely broken because you don't trust the Irish health service, while ignoring the fact that prescribing pills or carrying out a surgical procedure is vastly different from analysing cell samples in a lab and ****ing up on the reports.

    Strange how Vicky Phelan called for a yes vote, and can't see a comparison that matches your view.

    http://www.thejournal.ie/vicky-phelan-eighth-amendment-4019680-May2018/

    I suppose your view gives a different slant to what Freshpopcorn correctly said he hope wouldn't see happen earlier in the thread
    Another thing I hope is that we don't see articles popping up when abortion is available in Ireland saying that I had to travel because the stigma still exists here.
    The country voted in favor of it by a large majority and some still against it but this is the same in every country!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    No trial and error required. You think that OBGYNs are not trained to perform them? That they are a difficult procedure? The procedure is already performed here. This is just more pointless scaremongering.

    Ah the scaremongering card. You just stick your fingers in your ears and shout loudly and hope nothing gets through.

    Let others worry about the enormous difficulties in creating an entire abortion services infrastructure from scratch. There is a lot more to abortion services than just two pills.

    Significant medical care is required around it, particularly those who require surgery. Clearly as a country we haven't a clue what is involved. Few are trained in it. Even in the UK they appear to be having difficulties recruiting trained staff and staff who can read and interpret scans properly.

    This is not to mention the infrastructure around inspections, oversight and accountability, insurance for medical negligence and so on.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 1,282 ✭✭✭pitifulgod


    Ah the scaremongering card. You just stick your fingers in your ears and shout loudly and hope nothing gets through.

    Let others worry about the enormous difficulties in creating an entire abortion services infrastructure from scratch. There is a lot more to abortion services than just two pills.

    Significant medical care is required around it, particularly those who require surgery. Clearly as a country we haven't a clue what is involved. Few are trained in it. Even in the UK they appear to be having difficulties recruiting trained staff and staff who can read and interpret scans properly.

    This is not to mention the infrastructure around inspections, oversight and accountability, insurance for medical negligence and so on.
    The medical community such as the Masters of Rotunda, Peter Boylan, gynaecologists and obstetricians etc are pretty confident confident that they can put together such a framework. Eg guidelines exist globally so plenty of implementations that it can be based around in terms of regulation. I'm more confident in medical experts than those who are trying to find any reason to prevent Ireland from handling its own medical care.


  • Registered Users Posts: 40,176 ✭✭✭✭ohnonotgmail


    Ah the scaremongering card. You just stick your fingers in your ears and shout loudly and hope nothing gets through.

    Let others worry about the enormous difficulties in creating an entire abortion services infrastructure from scratch. There is a lot more to abortion services than just two pills.

    Significant medical care is required around it, particularly those who require surgery. Clearly as a country we haven't a clue what is involved. Few are trained in it. Even in the UK they appear to be having difficulties recruiting trained staff and staff who can read and interpret scans properly.

    This is not to mention the infrastructure around inspections, oversight and accountability, insurance for medical negligence and so on.

    and yet the college of obgyns voted overwhelmingly for Yes. They dont seem to have raised this objection. Now,nobody is saying that there is work to be done. But to imply that the irish health service lacks the competence to do so is nonsense.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    Nah, I met be wrong. We never have newly qualified consultants or midwives in Ireland.



    Training is a minor issue. Ireland adheres to industry standards for medical training.

    Delays...simple to handle. Train more staff.


    You really are beyond the stage of ridiculous now. I'm not going to trust dentists because there may be a queue....

    The only one being ridiculous is yourself.

    You think we can catch up with the experience and infrastructure of the UK, overnight?

    You are deluded in the extreme if you believe that.

    But that's the problem with people like you. You haven't thought the whole thing through. Reminds me of Brexit in a way. People voting with emotion and feeling. Didn't bother to think of what follows afterwards.

    My fear is Irish women will be effectively guinea pigs for the first few years as we struggle to build the infrastructure.

    Whether you are for or against abortion is irrelevant.

    What is badly missing from this whole debate is objectivity and a cool headed analysis of what is involved in providing abortion services in Ireland. We have no experience in directly providing the service on a mass scale.


  • Posts: 5,917 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Ah the scaremongering card. You just stick your fingers in your ears and shout loudly and hope nothing gets through.

    Let others worry about the enormous difficulties in creating an entire abortion services infrastructure from scratch. There is a lot more to abortion services than just two pills.

    Significant medical care is required around it, particularly those who require surgery. Clearly as a country we haven't a clue what is involved. Few are trained in it. Even in the UK they appear to be having difficulties recruiting trained staff and staff who can read and interpret scans properly.

    This is not to mention the infrastructure around inspections, oversight and accountability, insurance for medical negligence and so on.

    As someone who spent ten years in the medical software and devices field from pharmacy right up to chemotherapy treatment, you'd be surprised how fast people can be up skilled from the knowledge they already have from college and additional continuous training and research. Insurance for medical negligence etc is already in place for surgical procedures in hospitals, and for general practice in relation to prescribing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    Let others worry about the enormous difficulties in creating an entire abortion services infrastructure from scratch. There is a lot more to abortion services than just two pills.

    So is the effort setting up a system a reason for not doing it now? Changed your tune yet again! Nothing is being set up from scratch.

    Significant medical care is required around it, particularly those who require surgery. Clearly as a country we haven't a clue what is involved. Few are trained in it. Even in the UK they appear to be having difficulties recruiting trained staff and staff who can read and interpret scans properly.

    Every woman in Ireland who is pregnant gets scans. We already have the people trained to read the scans and interpret them properly.

    This is not to mention the infrastructure around inspections, oversight and accountability, insurance for medical negligence and so on.

    That is all in place already. You are just making things up!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,448 ✭✭✭✭Cupcake_Crisis


    Ah the scaremongering card. You just stick your fingers in your ears and shout loudly and hope nothing gets through.

    Let others worry about the enormous difficulties in creating an entire abortion services infrastructure from scratch. There is a lot more to abortion services than just two pills.

    Significant medical care is required around it, particularly those who require surgery. Clearly as a country we haven't a clue what is involved. Few are trained in it. Even in the UK they appear to be having difficulties recruiting trained staff and staff who can read and interpret scans properly.

    This is not to mention the infrastructure around inspections, oversight and accountability, insurance for medical negligence and so on.

    You are aware that medical staff already train in abortion services right? They just go abroad to do it? Not to mention the vast amount of foreign doctors working in our hospitals who come from countries where they would have routinely performed abortions?

    Don’t mind that though. It’s better to scaremonger.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    The only one being ridiculous is yourself.

    You think we can catch up with the experience and infrastructure of the UK, overnight?

    You are deluded in the extreme if you believe that.

    But that's the problem with people like you. You haven't thought the whole thing through. Reminds me of Brexit in a way. People voting with emotion and feeling. Didn't bother to think of what follows afterwards.

    My fear is Irish women will be effectively guinea pigs for the first few years as we struggle to build the infrastructure.

    Whether you are for or against abortion is irrelevant.

    What is badly missing from this whole debate is objectivity and a cool headed analysis of what is involved in providing abortion services in Ireland. We have no experience in directly providing the service on a mass scale.

    Attack the post and not the poster!

    The read my post prior to this one. The ball is already in play. Women already get the scans etc. Women already get abortions. Nothing is new except maybe aGP led service.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    So is the effort setting up a system a reason for not doing it now? Changed your tune yet again! Nothing is being set up from scratch.




    Every woman in Ireland who is pregnant gets scans. We already have the people trained to read the scans and interpret them properly.




    That is all in place already. You are just making things up!

    Fine. Point me to the specific body who oversees the direct provision of abortion services in Ireland on a MASS scale.


  • Registered Users Posts: 40,176 ✭✭✭✭ohnonotgmail


    The only one being ridiculous is yourself.

    You think we can catch up with the experience and infrastructure of the UK, overnight?

    You are deluded in the extreme if you believe that.

    But that's the problem with people like you. You haven't thought the whole thing through. Reminds me of Brexit in a way. People voting with emotion and feeling. Didn't bother to think of what follows afterwards.

    My fear is women will be effectively guinea pigs for the first few years as we struggle to build the infrastructure.

    Whether you are for or against abortion is irrelevant.

    What is badly missing from this whole debate is objectivity and a cool headed analysis of what is involved in providing abortion services in . We have no experience in directly providing the service on a mass scale.

    we already have the infrastructure. surgical abortions will be part of the existing maternity service. And they will represent the minority of abortions.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    Attack the post and not the poster!

    The read my post prior to this one. The ball is already in play. Women already get the scans etc. Women already get abortions. Nothing is new except maybe aGP led service.

    UK has 50 years experience.
    Marie Stopes and similar clinics do most of the work.
    GP led service is largely meaningless. When complications occur, its to the local hospital and A&E wards women will be sent. To lie on a stretcher like everyone else.
    Our GPs have little or no experience of providing abortion services because it has been illegal up to now. They also will be starting from scratch.
    Probably the best solution is to invite in the likes of Marie Stopes who have the experience.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    Fine. Point me to the specific body who oversees the direct provision of abortion services in Ireland on a MASS scale.

    HIQA are responsible for inspections of medical facilities. There are groups such as INAB and JCI. These check that all procedures, practices, etc. are up to international standard and accredited.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,495 ✭✭✭✭eviltwin


    Abortion pills are already prescribed in Ireland albeit for different reasons but our doctors and nursing staff are well able to manage the needs of women using abortion services.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,448 ✭✭✭✭Cupcake_Crisis


    UK has 50 years experience.
    Marie Stopes and similar clinics do most of the work.
    GP led service is largely meaningless. When complications occur, its to the local hospital and A&E wards women will be sent. To lie on a stretcher like everyone else.
    Our GPs have little or no experience of providing abortion services because it has been illegal up to now. They also will be starting from scratch.
    Probably the best solution is to invite in the likes of Marie Stopes who have the experience.
    Except they’ll be sent to maternity hospitals, not A&E, where they’ll be well equipped to deal with the complications


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    UK has 50 years experience.
    Marie Stopes and similar clinics do most of the work.
    GP led service is largely meaningless. When complications occur, its to the local hospital and A&E wards women will be sent. To lie on a stretcher like everyone else.
    Our GPs have little or no experience of providing abortion services because it has been illegal up to now. They also will be starting from scratch.
    Probably the best solution is to invite in the likes of Marie Stopes who have the experience.

    Our GPs are fast learners. They learned about the Zika virus double quick.

    Holles Street has an A&E. Surely that's where pregnant women in the area with complications already go. Pregnant women on the Northside of Dublin normally go to the Rotunda. Louth go to maternity services in Drogheda, etc.

    I don't see where you are going with this. The services are already in place to support whatever framework is specified.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,133 ✭✭✭Shurimgreat


    pitifulgod wrote: »
    The medical community such as the Masters of Rotunda, Peter Boylan, gynaecologists and obstetricians etc are pretty confident confident that they can put together such a framework. Eg guidelines exist globally so plenty of implementations that it can be based around in terms of regulation. I'm more confident in medical experts than those who are trying to find any reason to prevent Ireland from handling its own medical care.

    Marie Stopes, 40 years experience in providing abortions and among the world leading experts, have 400 botched abortions in 2 months in their clinics as well as countless other issues and shortcomings.

    But Irish doctors with virtually zero experience in providing abortions are confident they can do the job. Pull the other one.

    If the Yes side are going to support abortions in Ireland, they need to get it right.

    As I said I wouldn't touch Irish abortion services with a barge pole for at least a decade. But if anyone else wants to be a guinea pig go ahead.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    Marie Stopes, 40 years experience in providing abortions, have 400 botched abortions in 2 months in the clinics as well as countless other issues and shortcomings.

    But Irish doctors with virtually zero experience in providing abortions are confident they can do the job. Pull the other one.

    If the Yes side are going to support abortions in Ireland, they need to get it right.

    As I said I wouldn't touch Irish abortion services with a barge pole for at least a decade. But if anyone else wants to be a guinea pig go ahead.

    So because of an issue in the UK we should never contemplate offering a particular service in Ireland? We would have no doctors or hospitals if that was the case!

    Major issue with Harold Shipman as he murdered 15 patients....so lets not provide GP services in Ireland. There is no logic to that.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,495 ✭✭✭✭eviltwin


    Marie Stopes, 40 years experience in providing abortions and among the world leading experts, have 400 botched abortions in 2 months in their clinics as well as countless other issues and shortcomings.

    But Irish doctors with virtually zero experience in providing abortions are confident they can do the job. Pull the other one.

    If the Yes side are going to support abortions in Ireland, they need to get it right.

    As I said I wouldn't touch Irish abortion services with a barge pole for at least a decade. But if anyone else wants to be a guinea pig go ahead.

    But Irish women are already dependent on these clinics in the UK. Or they do the abortion at home with no medical supervision.


  • Registered Users Posts: 83 ✭✭Shadowstrife


    I want to ask if anyone has heard anti-Donegal sentiment, sniggering,snobbery or cheap jokes since the result. Please elaborate, thanks! :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,483 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    I want to ask if anyone has heard anti-Donegal sentiment, sniggering,snobbery or cheap jokes since the result. Please elaborate, thanks! :)

    They may be off the holiday destination list for some.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 7,237 ✭✭✭mcmoustache



    You say out in force, I say an accurate representation of the electorate.

    Quiet you! You're interfering with the victim narrative that they're trying to push.


Advertisement