THE BATTALION TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1980 • • iaL it i ’amewlj > joker, of situ srs arej i for y cajmljJ pacityi beensU io need Jj i constiti*- leprc Ted Hayes, 25, a graduate student at the hyperbaric lab, monitors a sheep dive testing fetal susceptibility to the bends. Photo by Connie Burke esearch continues in iving effects on fetuses tem :onPostl By CONNIE BURKE Battalion Reporter sfResearch that a Texas A&M Uni- ersity professor has been working n for the last 14 years has provoked ondemnation from a women’s activ- :t group, comment from a public fficial and concern from thousands fwomen divers. Dr W.P. Fife, a research biolog it, has been trying to determine rhether diving can barm the fetus of regnant women. So far, his re- earth has shown that diving can arm the fetus while the mother ^hows no signs of decompression ^^ickness, referred to as “the bends.” “Ten years ago, a student working nth pregnant rats found the fetus )K when the mother had a lethal pe of the bends, ” Fife said. ^ "But during a sheep dive later eon- ^iucted, the fetus was harmed when ©thing happened to the mother,” /id said. syj To conduct this experiment, Fife r one of his assistants puts a sheep in ^ compression chamber and then unulates the air pressure within the hamher to different depths under /ater. This is what Fife calls a dive. Decompression sickness, more Ommonly known as the bends, is aused when nitrogen and oxygen nibbles are trapped inside the body fter someone has been diving. If a lerson swims to the surface of the rater too quickly after a dive, bub- iles can form in the tissues, muscles nd bloodstream of the body. These ubbles can slightly effect a person y causing only a small amount of •i; B' At other times, they can per- Janently paralyze its victim or ring death. femed that a women may experi- sice no side effects from diving, but he fetus she is carrying may be jarmed without her knowledge. So ar, research he has conducted on heep has confirmed his worries. *¥? has found that diving may cause r~ hertf»! birth to a deformed baby. Fife chose sheep for the experi ment because the circulation of the animal’s placenta is more similar to that of humans than other animals. Fife’s research has had its share of attention. For example, his work was a sore spot to some women who advocated that Fife’s research is the work of a male chauvinist. He said Nikki Van Hightower, a leader of a women’s activist group, has accused him of conducting the research to limit work available to women. “At first, I found women who were calling me ‘macho.’ But I like to see women enjoy sports, too,” Fife said. Fife said he gets calls from women concerned about the effects of di ving. “They will say they just found out they are pregnant and that they have been diving. They want to know if the baby will be deformed and if they should have an abortion,” Fife said. Fife said he tells them he doesn’t know for sure whether diving causes birth defects, but he thinks it is best to tell them not to dive if they think they may be pregnant. A one-sentenced, off-hand remark by Gov. Bill Clements caused Fife’s research to gain more publicity. Cle ments implied that scuba diving could be a swift, comfortable way to have an underwater baby abortion. This remark was repeated in news papers, magazines and on radio and televison stations. “As far as I’m concerned, it was a harmless remark,” Fife said. He said Clements made the comment when he was being quickly reviewed on all the research projects at Texas A&M University. Those concerned with Fife’s work include more than public officials and women activists. Women divers who are employed as professional di vers or who frequently dive as a hob by are concerned about dangers to a fetus when diving. Fife said his research has not cre ated any laws which forbid pregnant women from diving or from con tinuing their work. Every woman may still decide for herself whether or not she wants to dive while she is pregnant, but his research may be gin to alert employers about the pos sible setbacks of hiring women di vers. If a woman has pregnancy problems resulting from diving, her employer will have to give her time off work and possibly give her work man’s compensation payments. Her employer may later decide it is more economical to hire only male divers rather than hiring potential compen sation collectors. While the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex, it does not resolve questions regarding the rights of pregnant women. Employers have traditionally con- , sidered pregnancy as a voluntary condition that interferes with work performance. In such cases, an em ployer would not be obligated to pay her during the time she misses work. However, payment could be col lected if there was an employment agreement or union contract pre viously secured. When Congress enacted the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the law changed to provide women with the same company policies relating to disabil ity. The employer may not terminate the woman because she has reached a certain stage of pregnancy. In stead, she will be permitted to re main on the job until she is no longer to perform the work. If she does physical work like di ving and her employer has a policy of transferring the employees under medical disability to lighter assign ments, then she will be subject to the same practice. Consequently, a woman who now holds a diving job cannot be fired because she is pre gnant and cannot carry out her di ving duties. ide p ; 1 asal Ii lessn* 1 jert’ ened Jei# ,0 Attention Students: MSC Town Hall is in the process of conducting a random survey of 2,000 Texas A&M University students. IMSCI di Kown holll The results of the survey will be presented to the Town Hall selection committee, which consists of three faculty members and fifteen students, that represent a cross sec tion of campus (twelve students are non Town Hall members). The feedback from the survey and the selec tion committee will help Town Hall determine student ientertainment preferences for the 1980-81 Town Hall season. If you receive one of these survey forms in the mail please fill it out completely and mail it back in promptly, so that we can begin our booking process for next year as soon as possible. Thank you for your coop eration. 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