FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Kerry Townsend Jacob, (917) 806-2550
July 5,
2005
National Advocates for Pregnant Women
Over
60 Leading Medical, Public Health, Child Welfare and Drug Treatment
Organizations and Experts Ask Hawai`i Supreme Court to Overturn
Conviction of Tayshea Aiwohi
American
College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, American Psychiatric Association,
American Society of Addiction Medicine; National Association of
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors, Inc; National Council on
Alcoholism and Drug Dependence National Association of Social Workers;
National Asian Pacific Womenıs Health Forum; The Hygeia Foundation,
Inc; Hawai`i Substance Abuse Free Environment Council
Prosecuting
Pregnant Women Who Experience Drug Dependencies Will Undermine Health
of Children and Women.
Hawai`i - More than
sixty leading state and national public health, child welfare, and drug
treatment organizations and experts (full list below) today asked the
Supreme Court of Hawai`i to overturn the conviction of Tayshea Aiwohi,
the first woman in Hawai`i to be charged and convicted of manslaughter
based on the theory that pregnant women can be held criminally liable
for the outcomes of their pregnancies. Amici (friends of the court)
argue that this conviction is not authorized by Hawai`i law and
violates well-established consensus in the medical community that such
a prosecution is irrational, ineffective, and counterproductive to
maternal, fetal and newborn health.
"Punishing women for failing to have healthy pregnancy outcomes
undermines health care for both pregnant women and their future
children by frightening women away from that health care," said Amicus
Leslie Hartley Gise, MD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, John A Burns
School of Medicine, University of Hawai`i.
She added that "Suggesting that a pregnant woman who is struggling with
a drug dependency problem is no different from a man who attacks her,
reflects a terrible disregard for pregnant women and a profound
misunderstanding of the nature of drug dependency."
On October 9, 2003, Tayshea Aiwohi, a thirty-one- year old Native
Hawaiian, was indicted for the offense of manslaughter on the theory
that her ingestion of methamphetamine during pregnancy contributed to
the death of her 2-day-old son, Treyson. (Treyson, who was born
approximately four weeks premature, died at home, hours after being
released from the hospital)
Ms. Aiwohi sought to have the case dismissed arguing that the stateıs
criminal laws were not intended to be used as a mechanism to police
pregnancy. On June 3, 2004, Hawai`i Circuit Judge Michael Town ruled
that Hawai`i state law does not give a woman "immunity" for "allegedly
harming her fetus if it is later born and dies." Judge Town
determined that pregnant women in relationship to their own bodies
could be treated as the same as third parties who attack pregnant
women. Rather than face a trial, Ms. Aiwohi accepted a conditional plea
bargain in which she plead no contest to manslaughter but preserved the
right to appeal the trial courtıs order. On September 22, 2004, Ms.
Aiwohiıs legal counsel Todd Eddins of Honolulu, Hawai`i, filed a notice
of appeal and on March 15, 2005 he filed the opening brief in the
Hawai`i Supreme Court.
Today, drug treatment professionals; physicians and nurses who care for
pregnant women and their children; medical researchers who study the
effects of drug use during pregnancy; and professionals who counsel
women and families who have experienced the tragedy of perinatal loss
filed an amicus (friend of the court) brief explaining why the decision
as a matter of law, logic, and public health must be overturned.
David T. Goldberg, as counsel for National Advocates for Pregnant Women
is representing these organizations and individuals in support of Ms.
Aiwohi. They explain that the problems posed by drug use during
pregnancy are serious public health issues but condemn the arrest and
prosecution of pregnant women because drug dependency is a disease not
a crime; because such prosecutions are likely to deter pregnant women
from seeking prenatal care and treatment for drug and alcohol addiction
that is beneficial to them and their children; and because such
punitive approaches have no proven benefits for the health of children.
While Amici do not suggest that using methamphetamine during pregnancy
is in any way benign, they nevertheless challenge the assumption that
"illegal" drugs, such as methamphetamine, pose uniquely high risks of
fetal or infant harm. Amici note that the adverse effects of in utero
exposure to methamphetamine are less well-established and likely no
more grave than those of any number of "legal" substances including
tobacco and alcohol, whose pregnancy risks have been widely known and
extensively documented for many years.
"Instead of prosecuting pregnant women with drug problems, we should be
working together to increase access to family drug treatment programs
and respectful, confidential health care services that will in fact
improve the health of mothers and babies," said Katherine Irwin, PhD,
Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Hawai`i,
Manoa
Oral argument in the case is scheduled before the Hawai`i Supreme Court
on October 19, 2005.
ORGANIZATIONS
American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry
American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
American Psychiatric Association
American Society of Addiction Medicine
Association for Medical Education and Research in Substance Abuse
Association of Women Psychiatrists
Center for Gender and Justice
Citizens for Midwifery
Doctors of the World-USA
Drug Policy Alliance
Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii
Finding Common Ground
Global Lawyer and Physicians
Harm Reduction Coalition
Hawaii Substance Abuse Free Environment Council
The Hygeia Foundation, Inc.
National Advocates for Pregnant Women
National Asian Pacific Womenıs Health Forum
The National Association for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC)
The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
The National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Womenıs Health
National Association of Social Workers
National Association of Social Workers Hawaii Chapter
National Latina Health Organization
National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health
National Perinatal Association
Our Bodies Ourselves
INDIVIDUALS ORGANIZATIONS
FOR IDENTIFICATION ONLY
Elizabeth M. Armstrong, PhD, MPA, Assistant Professor of Sociology and
Public Affairs
Adrienne Asch, Henry R. Luce Professor in Biology, Ethics and the
Politics of
Human Reproduction, Wellesley College
Marylou Behnke, MD, Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Florida
Michael Berman, MD, Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and
Reproductive Sciences, Yale University School of Medicine
Mona Bomgaars, MD, Hawaii Academy of Family Physicians
Nancy D. Campbell, Assistant Professor, Renssclaer Polytechnic Institute
Wendy Chavkin, MD, MPH, Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family
Health, Mailman School of Public Heath, Columbia University
Maureen Corry, Executive Director, Maternity Center Association
Stephanie S. Covington, Co-director, Center for Gender and Justice
Nancy Day, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry and Epidemiology, Western
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh Medical
Center
Virginia Delaney-Black, MD, MPH, Wayne State University
Ernest Drucker, PhD, Montefiore Medical Center/ Albert Einstein College
of Medicine
Fonda Davis Eyler, PhD, Professor in the Department of Pediatrics of
the University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville, Florida
Bruce B. Ettinger, MD, MPH Academy on Violence and Abuse
Jennifer B. Frank, MD, University of Hawaiıi at Manoa
Leslie Heartly Gise, MD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, John A Burns
School of Medicine, University of Hawaii
Leonard Glantz, PhD, Boston University School of Health
Maichael A. Grodin, M.D. Professor of Health Law, Bioethics, and Human
Rights
Boston University School of Public Health, Professor of Socio-Medical
Sciences, Community Medicine, and Psychiatry, Boston University School
of Medicine
Martin Guggenheim, Professor at NYU Law School
Katherine Irwin, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology,
University of Hawaii, Manoa
Stephen R. Kandall, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics
David C. Lewis, MD, Professor of Community Health and Medicine,
Brown University
Ruth Macklin, MD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Wendy K. Mariner, JD, LLM, MPH, Professor of Health Law, School of
Public Health, Professor of Law, School of Law, Professor of
Socio-Medical Sciences, School of Medicine, Boston University.
Luz Alvarez Martinez, National Latina Health Organization
Diana Romero, Project Director of Finding Common Ground
Ruth Rose-Jacobs, PhD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Boston
University, School of Medicine
F. David Schneider, MD, MSPH
Carol Sakala, PhD, MSPH
Deborah Spitz MD, American Psychiatric Association
Andrea Stolar, MD, Case School of Medicine
Keerthy Sunder, MD, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Linda L.M. Worley, MD, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Susan Wysocki, President and CEO, National Association of Nurse
Practitioners in Womenıs Health
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