Disability news, Accessibility Issues, Disability Issues, Accessiblity News

Stand tall

August 23rd, 2007

Text of my keynote speech about routine prenatal screening

delivered at the 35th annual convention

of the National Down Syndrome Congress

Kansas City, Missouri

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Long ago, my husband and I thought we had the world figured out. We had good educations, good jobs, nice offices, even preferential parking spaces. We thought we had it made.

Then, a little more than 23 years ago, Margaret showed up, providing us with the most important learning experience of our lives. Our first order of business was trying to figure out this whole Down syndrome thing, of course, but ultimately it dawned on us that the effect of an extra chromosome here or there was the least of what we needed to learn. Over time, we came to reevaluate our core values, and to understand that much of what we had been led to believe – about what makes a family happy, what makes a life worthwhile — was misguided.

I’m sure I’m not alone in saying that for the first few years of Margaret’s life we worked very, very hard to do everything we could to help Margaret become “normal.” It was only later that we realized what most families get to eventually: that “normal” wasn’t the point. Our real goal was to help Margaret be Margaret. It was only by letting go of the concept of normal that we were able to see our daughter as the delightful person that she truly is, not obscured by some burdensome word, some arbitrary social ideal that had nothing to do with any of us.

Like it or not, though, we have to admit that we as a nation have been sold this concept of “normal,” and we’ve fallen for it. Somehow, while the disability community was out of the room, the world of medicine established a diagnosable standard called “normal” and now we’re all trying as hard as we can to achieve it.

Starting this year, it is recommended by the professional organizations representing obstetricians and gynecologists in the United States and Canada that all pregnant women be offered prenatal screening for Down syndrome. All pregnant women. Prenatal screening tests are now well on their way to being standard of care. Insurance companies are covering them. And since Down syndrome is not a condition that can be repaired in utero, it must be fairly assumed that the purpose of this testing is to allow – and urge — women to terminate their pregnancies, which is in fact what has been happening about 85 to 90 percent of the time when Down syndrome is diagnosed prenatally.

This is a painful topic to talk about, I recognize, and it’s made more painful by the very ironic fact that these recommendations have come at a time when people with disabilities have more legal protections than ever before.

Not only that, people with Down syndrome are in general healthier and having a better quality of life than at any time in history. This is the first generation to benefit from early intervention, inclusion, improved health care and better educational opportunities, and they are blowing up yesterday’s old data. Increasingly, they’re completing high school, getting jobs, living more independently. Some are driving; some are getting married. Imagine: I met a woman with Down syndrome the other day who was part of a relay team that swam the English Channel. These are people who are living full lives and making contributions to their communities.

We laugh at our house every time we see some article in the media about how people are “suffering” from Down syndrome. Margaret, my daughter, has just moved into her own apartment with a couple of her girlfriends. She’s sure not suffering. And just the other day, self-advocate Audrey Wagnon delivered the same message in her speech to the full NDSC convention. Here’s how she said it: “I’m having the best life ever!”

But – oddly — we live in a time in history in which the faces of our loved ones have come to symbolize something in the public mind that is very much at odds with our life experience. People see our family members and think what they’ve been taught to think. They think our children are tragedies. Yet we who are privileged to live with them know that, despite some of the frustrations of day-to-day existence, our lives are also filled with possibility and love and joy.

So why the disconnect between our lives and society’s vision of them? Perhaps we should start by acknowledging the obvious: prejudices, biases and fears of disability run deep in our society, nourished by years of history and reinforced among other things by ignorance, gaps in the healthcare and educational systems and negative media images.

Physicians tell me that women want prenatal screens because they are very fearful of having a child with a disability.

Among other things, they fear that the financial burden would crush them or that they wouldn’t be able to get a decent education for their child. They’re afraid, too, that they would be held accountable for having a child with a disability, and that there would be people who would blame them for failing to prevent the birth of such a child. They are afraid of stigma and ridicule. Sadly, these are not unreasonable fears.

But that’s only one piece of the puzzle we face. Here are few more:

– Puzzle piece number two. Prospective parents are suing their doctors if they don’t get a so-called “perfect baby,” leading to skyrocketing insurance costs and doctors who want to run every test possible to prevent litigation. Not long ago, a Florida jury awarded a couple more than $20 million because their doctor failed to warn them that their son would be born with a genetic syndrome.

– Puzzle piece number three. Physicians, nurses and other health care providers are giving their patients negative, outdated, biased or incomplete information about Down syndrome, depriving them of the ability to make their own informed choices based on accurate information instead of negative stereotypes.

– Puzzle piece number four. Financial demands on doctors mean they have to process more and more patients in less and less time, giving them scant opportunity to discuss tests and deliver diagnoses in a sensitive, thoughtful compassionate way. Women are reporting that these rushed interactions feel coercive.

– Puzzle piece number five. Medical schools don’t offer clinical training about people with intellectual disabilities.

– Which brings us to puzzle piece number six. Let’s not forget that prenatal diagnostics is a profitable industry, in which hundreds of millions of dollars are spent each year. A substantial portion of that cash flow swells the accounts of the obstetricians and gynecologists who see pregnant women. By contrast, I should point out, the amount of money spent on research into treatments and processes to improve the lives of people with Down syndrome is minimal at best.

All these factors, I’m sorry to say, have combined to create an atmosphere in which there is a growing presumption that pregnant women should be tested for Down syndrome – a presumption, stoked by ignorance and stereotypes, that children like ours are expendable, that children like ours are without value, and that children like ours impose an unwanted cost on society. Somehow, without our knowledge or participation, a cost-benefit analysis has been applied to our children and they aren’t measuring up.

You may be wondering: How did we ever get to this point?

For the purposes of this conversation, let’s start back in the ‘50s. Most of you won’t remember it, but people with disabilities then had not been granted the right to go to public school. Doctors didn’t think that people with intellectual disabilities were capable of learning, and routinely recommended that they be sent away to institutions. During the ’50s in this country, an estimated half a million children were institutionalized, often under the most abusive and degrading conditions.

So when a French geneticist named Jerome Lejeune discovered the extra 21st chromosome that causes Down syndrome in the late ’50s, his discovery caused many to hope that treatments would soon be found. As you of course know, that didn’t happen. A far more straightforward task, from a scientific point of view, was the development of tests that could be used for prenatal diagnostics. Those tests really took off after abortion was legalized in 1973.

Doctors and scientists took a public role in recasting the definition of healthy fetuses and legitimate abortions, and what were called “therapeutic” abortions came to be regarded as a legitimate and desirable way to prevent or eliminate Down syndrome. It was in some ways just an accident of history that these so-called therapeutic abortions became well entrenched before our society was able to see what individuals with Down syndrome, given a chance, could do.

It is, as author Michael Berube has written, a bitter paradox: even though we have barely begun to explore the ways in which we could include people with disabilities in our society, we are devoting precious time and resources to developing better ways of spotting and eliminating these people before they are born.

Particularly troubling is the fact that this shift – to preventing Down syndrome by attempting to prevent the births of children who have it – was largely engineered by members of the healing professions, the very people who are charged with the responsibility of protecting vulnerable populations.

So now we are left with a harsh reality indeed. The implicit message the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists seems to be sending is this: even though racial, cultural and ethnic diversity are valued and supported in our society, genetic diversity is not. It seems that it’s more important to be “normal” than to be “human.” Or maybe we should view this as less a philosophical discussion than a pragmatic one. For OB/GYN’s, it’s better for business to deliver only babies that the medical profession calls “good outcomes.”

Somehow, along the way, the professional organization representing these doctors has failed to notice that they have embarked upon the elimination of an entire class of people who have a history of oppression, discrimination and exclusion.

I know we empathize with today’s young parents. Their finances are limited. They have grown up in an era of fear, taught to be afraid of strangers and wary of the strange. In the obstetrician’s office they trade their fears for the illusion of control — but in the process they are giving away much of what defines America at its best: a society that assumes responsibility for those who are vulnerable, a society that accepts those who are different, a society marked by generosity, liberty and freedom of thought.

These may sound like abstract concepts, but they’re not. The consequences of all these uninformed individual decisions, made in the privacy of the obstetrician’s office, are being played out before our eyes every day. We see them when our family members are the subject of unwanted stares. When people talk about how someone “had” to get rid of a pregnancy because it wasn’t perfect. When people tell us that special ed kids “cost too much.” When people ask us, sometimes in ways that seem unfriendly, whether we had “the test.” Or even why we didn’t have “the test.” When medical professionals look at our beloved children and say “that shouldn’t have happened.”

Let’s face it: people with Down syndrome have a catastrophic PR problem. The doom and gloom talk has gone largely unchallenged for far too long.

It gives me great pain to tell you all this, because I know you love your family members as much as my husband and my son and I love Margaret. I know, too, that you share our vision that people with Down syndrome are valued, contributing and vibrant members of our families and our communities.

We come together at reunions like these to affirm the value of our family members’ lives, secure in the knowledge that their extra chromosome is NOT the most important thing about them. They belong; they dream big dreams; they contribute; they deserve respect. What makes their lives difficult is not their genetic makeup; it’s the uninformed attitudes of others.

We know this, of course, but it’s not enough for us to share the message with one another. We need to put it out where all the world can see.

Let’s start with what we can do as individuals. As I’ve gone around the conference, I’ve heard about some great things that people are doing in their own communities. Things like:

–Helping to educate the doctors and genetic counselors in their area by visiting their classes or professional meetings.

–Building relationships with hospitals, and talking with families who have a fresh diagnosis.

– Monitoring their local news media, and holding them accountable for their coverage and their use of language about people with disabilities.

These are great steps, but let’s not stop there. Let’s dream even bigger.

It’s time for us to insist that our organizations advocate forcefully on behalf of people with Down syndrome in ways that are targeted to reach decision-makers, to reach medical professionals, and of course to reach the general public. Here are some of the things we need to do.

1. We need to provide disability awareness training and accurate information directly to obstetricians, to gynecologists, and to the professionals who assist them. They need to hear the nuanced, compassionate message that is at the core of diversity and human rights: all people have value and dignity and are worthy of celebration. We’ve told them this nicely. Now perhaps it’s time to turn up the volume.

2. We need to put out lots and lots of well-designed materials that will teach doctors how to discuss prenatal screening and diagnoses with their patients. Senators Kennedy and Brownback have recently reintroduced their bill on this topic. Whether it’s this bill or another one, we need to find a way for doctors to get the materials they need.

3. We need to improve medical school curriculums, which include almost nothing about children with disabilities.

4. We need to hold publishers accountable for the editorial content of their pregnancy handbooks. Take a look in your local bookstore, and notice what those books say about our young people. If they carry anything at all, it’s more than likely a cold, clinical list of symptoms and diagnoses, guaranteed to strike fear in the heart of any pregnant woman. We must change this.

5. We need to use technology to convey our message. Where does your average 20-or 30-something look for medical information? Right. The Internet. If we truly want to help people make informed decisions, we need to get involved in the Internet in a big way, both in print and in video. Our content needs to be useful and modern.

6. We need to enable prospective parents to see that people with disabilities live good lives, and that they have warm, sustaining relationships with their families and friends. Presently, that information is only coming to them anecdotally, if at all. Imagine how different things would be if people could be referred to a website that allowed them to click on videos that would show them footage of people with Down syndrome, of all ages and ability levels, going through their daily lives. America’s teenagers are communicating actively through Youtube – why shouldn’t we?

7. We need to speak up to challenge the old stereotypes about our family members and ourselves. We’re not victims. We’re not heroes. We’re just ordinary people sharing slightly extraordinary lives with people we love and who love us.

I talked earlier about people who sometimes ask us about whether we had “the test.” Here’s what I think they really want to know. Did you, or would you, choose this person to be in your family? Let me tell you my answer to that question.

When my husband and I decided to have children, we were kids. (Okay, we were in our early 30s. But viewed from a distance, that sure looks young now!) Sure, we had lots of education, degrees and experiences, but there was a lot we didn’t know:

– We didn’t know what it meant to be a parent.

– We didn’t know that there was no such a thing as normal.

– And we sure didn’t know that that it was possible to have a happy, thriving, loving family with a child who was not the same as everybody else’s.

Fortunately for us, we have learned a thing or two at the University of Margaret since then. We learned

– No child is “normal” — and neither are we;

– We, like all parents, need to get over the notion of our children meeting some arbitrary standards of perfection that we couldn’t possibly achieve ourselves; and

– We choose our children, and each other, over and over, every day of our lives.

In short, my husband and I have been privileged to share our lives with someone who is a constant reminder of some essential truths: the importance of family, the strength of unconditional love, the dignity and value of vulnerable people, and the fact that IQ points are not a good predictor of personal happiness or quality of life.

As we all ponder how to carry these messages to the outside world, as we get ready to leave the safe haven of our reunion today, let’s remember that we are all stronger together than we are separately.

But talking among ourselves, while important, won’t get the message out. We have to communicate directly with those not in this room.

A couple of years ago, a newspaper running a piece I’d written asked for a family photo, including Margaret. I gulped, feeling exposed, and called my husband to ask his thoughts. He said, “Stand tall; run the picture.” We did.

That is my message to all of us: Stand tall; get out the message.

People will listen.

We can do it.

Together.

13 Responses to “Stand tall”

  1. Plainbellied Says:

    I’m so confused by this article, and many of the ensuing comments. I have a family history of Down Syndrome, resulting from a genetic translocation. I had an amnio with my daughter (who is four and normal) and I had one again for my son (who is due in October and has Down Syndrome). If my other three pregnancies hadn’t ended in miscarriage, I would have had an amnio with each of them as well.

    Why is the assumption so strong that the only reason for prenatal testing is a desire to abort imperfect babies? I wanted to separate dealing with a possible diagnosis of Down Syndrome, mourning the loss of my imagined child, from the birth of my actual child. Isn’t it okay just to want to find out?

    I am strongly against abortion. It breaks my heart that so many children are killed because they have been diagnosed with Down Syndrome. But I would never want the option of knowing taken away from me. I’m so grateful to sort through my emotions in advance, and I’m more eager than ever to meet my son and rejoice in his birth.

  2. Nick McGivney Says:

    Very pleased to have discovered this article (via Jeff G: thank you). I will use it to reinforce my own viewpoint as I take my first steps beyond the comfort of the Down syndrome community at large. Eloquent, thoughtful and comprehensive. Well done, Ms Bauer.

    Nick McGivney, Dublin Ireland

  3. Sherry Says:

    My daughter was considered “disposable” by most of the medical community. She had a fairly rare chromosomal disorder called Trisomy 18. Although so-called “termination” was never considered, we opted for an amnio to find out what we were dealing with.

    When the results came back with a problem where 85% of pregnancies end in stillbirth or miscarriage and 90% of those 700 or so born alive each year will not live to their first birthday, the perinatologist “recommended a D&C.” When I commented that my baby was still alive, he said, “If you know she is going to die anyway, does it really matter when?” I was horrified. YES. It does matter.

    Our baby girl survived and defied so many dire predictions! She lived with us almost seven months before going home to Jesus’ comforting arms! We had 206 days to cuddle and snuggle. We had over six months to build memories of her with our (then) four-year-old son. Seven people accepted Christ’s invitation for a personal relationship at her Celebration of Life Service. Thousands of visits to our homepage and journal (since March 2004) attest to the fact that this tiny life had a purpose! She was here for a reason! Was she perfect physically? No. Had she lived, would she have been mentally agile? No. Could she love and understand love? I believe she did.

    What is the measure by which we deem life “worth” keeping? Where is the scale we use to measure a life’s worthiness? Is it really up to us to make those calls? We chose to let God be God and determine the number of her days and we have been so blessed by the doing.

    During this week where we pause and reflect on the sanctity of life, I wanted to add my two cents. Life is sacred. Period. Our little girl has forever changed my life. I will never be the same person I was before. I am a bit older, perhaps a bit wiser. While I had deeply held convictions before Audrey Grace came to stay for a while, they are now a part of my very being. Every life has a purpose. Every life has a reason for being. God doesn’t make mistakes. And through it all, I can say that God is Good, all the time.

    *********************
    Keep informing people of the blessings that can be, even if life doesn’t turn out the way we expected :0)

  4. Tom Says:

    Do we really want to be a society where the cure for imperfection is the eugenic abortion?

  5. Dawn Meisenheimer Lewis Says:

    I feel the medical profession should be the one place where our children’s lives are valued, especially during pregnancy.

    I went through prenatal screening, never with the intention of termination. When I received a screen positive for trisomy 18, I was basically refused an amnio for two reasons: 1. baby looked good on sonogram, 2. I wouldn’t terminate anyway.

    When I commented that I wanted to know because I would change my child’s birth to see him/her alive by having a c-section if the child had signs of trouble, I was told that with a trisomy 18 baby I would not be allowed to have a c-section or heroic after care for my baby. That was from the perinatologist.

    When I shared my conversation with my OB, she agreed with me that even if I had a baby with a terminal condition, it was okay to plan the birth so I could see my baby alive.

    Well, my baby was born and does not have trisomy 18 or any other trisomy/triploidy or apparent disability at this time. Still, in a moment, I was quite aware that my child’s life was not going to be valued if she was just different enough than some standard. I would not be allowed to birth my way, to attempt to see my baby alive, to try to keep my baby alive even if I had a rare trisomy 18 baby with a healthy enough body to be operated on.

    This woke me up to the scary fact that some medical people don’t believe everyone has the same rights. Not everyone is being treated equally, especially parents and preborn children who have a “poor prenatal diagnosis.”

    I write a small unpaid blog for babycenter.com. When I wrote about my screen results (mind you, no diagnosis, just screen results) I received from staff an email with links to their “termination for medical reasons” and “considering termination” bulletin boards. With the vast resources at their disposal, that is all I was pointed to from them…termination. It broke my heart.

    I didn’t push my doctor for an amnio, figuring at least my baby could be monitored in labor (and was overmonitored if you ask me) and would be born by c-section if she was crashing. I also figured I might actually get heroic measures to save her if she had heart or lung problems, which might give me time to see her alive. I ended up not needing all of that.

    No matter what child, or what my child’s body decided to do, I love my baby (and have since before I knew she was there). I sure wish all medical people could understand this kind of love, and could respect it.

  6. Andreas Says:

    Nina,

    if all options you mention would really be offered openly, without pushing and building up pressure for one way, I could agree with you. I do not think parents should be offered prenatal screening methods as a tool of selection, be it for Down Syndrome, for potential health risks or simply for the sex of the unborn child, like in China or India, but I could agree, maybe just for pragmatic reasons. ONLY the parents can make this decision.

    But that is NOT the reality. Not here in Germany, and, as far as I know from other parents, not in the USA. Legally, of course, the screening itself is just an option that can be accepted or declined. But in reality, it is not presented as an option - it has become standard procedure, and every responsible woman should clearly make use of it. At the same time, the only possible consequence of a “positive” screening result is rarely mentioned. Of course it can only be abortion, as there is no way of “curing” or “repairing” anything.

    Then, after such a diagnosis, again almost always only one option is presented (abortion), no contact to other parents with childs with DS is offered, and many doctors build up heavy pressure to terminate the pregnancy very quickly. Of course it HAS not to be like this, but unfortunately it IS the standard procedure. Abortion rates in Germany are usually about 90-95% after DS diagnosis - but at the same time we’ve seen several studies showing this rate decreased drastically whenever open consultation was offered and pressure for a quick decision was relieved.

    Yes, pregnant women should make their own choices, including the possibility of abortion. But before they decide they should have the option to get ALL information available, the option to make contact to other parents who are (or have been) in a similar situation, the option to take the time they need to make a decision that will not be revocable for the rest of their life (be it for or against abortion).

    Today, in many cases they simply do not have these options.

  7. Jeff Says:

    In response to Nina, where does your logic end? You are on a very slippery slope with your reasoning. Should we offer up termination if my unborn child could someday have cancer, autism or blond hair??? Doesn’t that get to be quite scary when we can potentially offer up the designer perfect child? I have a child with Down Syndrome, I have heard the outdated advice and information given to parents. All I pray is that others in this situation be given accurate information, good statistics and the opportunity to talk with other parents. I hurt for those who choose termination but I just want informed people making informed choices. This is not forcing fate on anyone.

  8. Nina Says:

    Patricia,
    Your speech is very closed minded. You love your daughter a lot. But just because you had no options regarding your pregnancy, you should not wish to take them from other people. No parents would ever wish for their child to have Down syndrome no matter how much they love their child now. Screening tests are offered to everyone and it is the patients’ choice whether they undergo them. No patient is forced to proceed with testing that they do not feel comfotable with. In your speech you are impling that pregnant women are incapable of making their own choices and they are following their OBs orders like sheep. They are forced into terminating affected pregnancies. Do you have any idea how the patients make these difficult decisions? Have you ever listened to their reasoning and went through this difficult time with them? Probably not. The people who decide to terminate a pregnancy are doing it because that is the best choice for them. They took time to think about it and it was a difficult decision to make. The people who are there with them such as physicians and genetic counselors are providing them with all available options(adoption, termination as well as continuing the pregnancy). The patients have an option to talk to the couples who have a child with Down syndrome. This issue is not black and white.
    Why do you think that you can make choices for other people? No one ever made a choice for you, you should allow people to do the same. People are smarter than you give them credit for and they know what is best for their life. Please stop forcing your fate onto others.

  9. Estee-Klar-Wolfond Says:

    I’m very glad to meet you. I/we are working to the same end with regards to autism and I often make the comparison with Down’s.

    I’m hoping we can chat. Our organization is The Autism Acceptance Project at http://www.taaproject.com and my blog is The Joy of Autism at http://www.joyofautism.blogspot.com

    Thanks for this article, which I will link to from my blog.

    Estee Klar-Wolfond
    Founder and Executive Director
    The Autism Acceptance Project

  10. anonymous Says:

    Absolutely fantastic post. I’m having my disability lit class read it this week. Keep up the good work, Pat. I will be telling everyone about your blog.

    Ralph Savarese

  11. Susan J. Bell Says:

    Pat,Thank you for your generosity of spirit; I wept while reading your incredible STANDING TALL speech. I will present your website address to the ladies of “The Book Group” on Wednesday night, and will miss your presence.
    Your website is most important to all of us, and we, Jim and I, want to be a part of the efforts to better inform the public on these issues. We all need to attend the “University of Margaret,” and you will be our guide and lecturer, please. Keep up the great work.

  12. Jonathan Miller Says:

    Jolly good speech. One other action point: get rid of the name Down/’s syndrome. It’s a downer.

  13. Mary Muller Says:

    This message deserves to be heard. I will do my best to share it with everyone I can.

Leave a Reply

Comment

Please copy the string a4Hvz7 to the field below:

`

About the Blog

More than 50 million people in the United States have disabilities, a number that is growing rapidly as the population ages. Experts say disability will soon affect the lives of most Americans. This blog attempts to explore what we know about disability, and to chronicle the efforts of people who are seeking new ways to address familiar challenges.

Join journalist Patricia E. Bauer as she sifts through current news and commentary, bringing you the best information about what's happening now and what it may mean for you and your loved ones.

Read More »

Search

Categories

Read More »

Election 2008

Read More »

Not2BeMissed

Read More »

My Articles & Essays

Read More »

FAQs

Headlines

Read More »

Tropic Thunder

Read More »

News2Use

Read More »

Mailing List

Sign up for our mailing list!





RSS Our RSS Feed



Archives
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007