The Government’s proposed abortion Bill risks normalising suicide among young men, a leading mental health professional has warned.
The inclusion of a suicide clause in the legislation could cost more lives than it saved by “normalising” it, Prof Kevin Malone said at the second day of the Oireachtas health committee’s hearing on the proposed abortion Bill.
Dr Malone, professor of psychiatry in UCD and co-founder of the charity Turn the Tide of Suicide, had earlier in the day launched a major report on suicide among Irish males.
By highlighting suicide, the State could be seen as legitimising it, thereby sending the wrong signal to young men who were most at risk, he warned.
Meanwhile, there were claims by a number of psychiatrists who testified before the hearings that they were excluded from the decision-making process of the College of Psychiatrists of Ireland, The Irish Times reports.
The college, which supports the Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill, said its position was arrived at by its council, the decision-making body representing more than 800 psychiatrists in the State.
A number of Fine Gael backbenchers continued to display deep unease over the proposed legislation.
Senator Fidelma Healy Eames described abortion as “a medieval solution to crisis pregnancy” and said Ireland had “done the right thing” by waiting so long to legislate for the X case.
She shared Prof Malone’s concerns that Ireland could be “legitimising” suicide by including it in legislation on abortion.
Dublin TD Peter Mathews accused the Government of rushing the Bill and said he wished the Taoiseach and Tánaiste were present for the hearings. “This is their Bill and they should be here, not just the Minister for Health. They’re over there in America but here is where the focus is for this country.”
About 50 anti-abortion activists protested against the attendance of Taoiseach Enda Kenny outside the Boston College graduation ceremony, where he was the guest speaker yesterday. The protesters held placards and banners outside the college’s Alumni Stadium where the ceremony took place, objecting to his appearance over the Government’s abortion legislation.
Independent Senator Ronan Mullan summarised the first two days of evidence at the Oireachtas hearings by saying that “the obstetricians are split over abortion and the psychiatrists are hopelessly divided”. That “tells its own story,” he said.
Dr Anthony McCarthy, president of the College of Psychiatrists of Ireland and one of only three perinatal psychiatrists in the country, acknowledged there was a wide range of opinions in the profession on abortion, reflecting the deep divisions in society on the issue.
He said the issue was seldom black and white, and attempts to present it as such did a great disservice to anyone with mental health issues.
“The question here is not ‘does abortion treat suicide?’ but is there ever a case where a woman will kill herself because of an unwanted pregnancy, and if so, what can we do to save her life and would that ever be a termination of pregnancy? This Bill is about legislating for that very small but real possibility”.
Last Friday, the Master of the Rotunda Hospital, Dr Sam Coulter Smith, testified that the proposed Bill created “a moral and ethical dilemma for doctors” because there was no evidence that abortion was a treatment for suicidal ideation.