An Urgent Message from Fr. Owen Kearns LC, Publisher
What we deliver with our journalism, we cannot deliver without your generosity.
The National Catholic Register needs your help. Revenue from subscriptions and advertising can't keep up with the rising cost of payroll, printing, postage and other expenses. We must rely on donations to make up the difference. To continue our hard-hitting investigative reporting, we need your financial support. Please donate today.
...or click here to learn about donating to specific projects.
Donations to Circle Media are tax-deductible. (Photo credits/CNS)
Bush Administration Seeks Comment on Conscience Regulations
BY ROBERT KUMPEL
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
September 7-13, 2008 Issue |
Posted 9/2/08 at 10:32 AM
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration
is proposing stronger regulations to protect physicians and health-care workers
who refuse to participate in abortions for reasons of conscience.
Health and Human Services Secretary
Michael Leavitt made that announcement Aug. 21. Leavitt expressed concerns for
doctors who were facing retaliation from employers and medical societies if
they refused to perform abortions. These regulations would require hospitals,
medical offices and nursing homes to certify in writing that they are complying
with federal laws already in place that protect the conscience rights of
health-care workers.
In 2007, the American College of
Obstetrics and Gynecology upped the ante for physicians with conscientious
objections in “The Limits of Conscientious Refusal in Reproductive Medicine.”
The statement insisted that doctors who would not perform abortions must at
least refer for them — a practice many pro-life physicians find unconscionable.
The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology grants board certification to
obstetricians and gynecologists. This certification is considered the standard
by all hospitals for employment, and no doctor can hope to join a hospital
staff without it.
Health and Human Services spokesman
Kevin Schweers said the new regulations are in a 30-day “comment” period, after
which the cabinet department will examine the comments. A final rule proposed
by Leavitt will follow. “When the decision for the final proposal is made, an
effective date will be set for the final rule.
“These regulations are very
important to a lot of physicians,” said Schweers. “We have physicians on record
who say that they were never even aware that there are conscience laws to
protect them.”
Abortion, however, is not the only
objectionable procedure doctors are faced with. The Health and Human Services
regulation proposal was issued only three days after the California Supreme
Court ruled that two doctors who refused to artificially inseminate a lesbian
could be sued for discrimination.
The
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, NARAL (National Abortion Rights
Action League) Pro-choice America and Planned Parenthood did not return phone
calls from the Register seeking comment. But on its website, the Southwest
Women’s Law Center in Albuquerque, N.M., said: “The overwhelming majority of
Americans support policies that make it easier for women to obtain
contraceptive services. If adopted, the Administration’s draft policy would
make it much more difficult for women to obtain birth control and information about
birth control. The women who would suffer the most from the draft policy are
low-income women, disproportionately women of color, who are dependent on
publicly-funded health care for family planning services.”
Richard
Doerflinger, assistant director of the Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities of
the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the California ruling reflects
anti-discrimination laws trumping the First Amendment.
“These
doctors always said that they did not inseminate single persons, and there is
no law in California that says you have to treat the single like they’re
married,” Doerflinger said. “But if the ruling that created a right to gay
‘marriage’ stands, they won’t be able to make that claim either. This is
another consequence of a line of cases the U.S. Supreme Court handed down in
1990, beginning with Employment
Division v. Smith, saying that the
First Amendment does not protect religious convictions as strongly as it used
to, because as long as a law is of ‘general application’ and is not directed by
bigotry or animus, then even people who object on religious grounds have to
comply with the law, so long as it has a legitimate purpose.”
Bringing Clarity
Ken
Pedroza, the attorney who represented the two physicians in their appeal to the
California Supreme Court, wasn’t surprised by the decision. “After oral
arguments, we weren’t shocked. I realized at that point that the chances of us
winning were very, very low,” he said. “It seemed to me that the court was not
going to be ruling in our favor. The question was: How far were they going to
go? They got rid of our affirmative defense based on the free exercise of
religious rights.
“In
California, we have conscience laws that protect doctors who don’t want to
perform abortions, termination of life and other health-care procedures, and
pharmacists have a conscience clause as well. They cover some good areas, but
in situations like ours [artificial inseminations], doctors don’t have that
same conscience right, and the California Supreme Court decided that doctors
don’t have a free exercise right in that context.”
He
said he would like to see new regulations that fit the context of the
artificial insemination case.
Doerflinger
believes the Health and Human Services regulations are long overdue. “We need
to enforce the laws on conscience rights, some of which have been on the books
for 35 years but have never been clarified by regulations. Now they can be more
effectively enforced.”
Catholic
Medical Association executive director John Brehany said the new regulations
are “urgently needed.” While conscience protections exist, Brehany said states
are not always consistent or comprehensive.
“Secretary
Leavitt says that one reason for promulgating new regulations is that many
people don’t know about the laws, how they apply, and it is not required for
institutions or people to document that they are in compliance with them,”
Brehany said. “When there are laws on race and sexual discrimination, everybody
must certify that they are in compliance, yet this [conscience] is a very
constitutional and human right, yet there is no requirement. I think Secretary
Leavitt is bringing clarity to why conscience rights should be protected under
the law and is trying to educate people about what it means.”
He
added, “We need to bring greater comprehensiveness and consistency to
protecting the conscience rights of health-care providers. In the California
case, the regulations would certainly have made it harder” to sue the doctors.
Interns Under Pressure
Brehany said that medical residents
and interns have complained to the Catholic Medical Association about the
pressure they face to prescribe contraceptives and perform abortions. “These
pressures are out there. There are several laws that prohibit this, and yet
they don’t know their rights. This is a frequent occurrence, and these laws
would especially help the young.”
He points out the recent move of the
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology to exclude doctors who won’t
perform abortions from board certification. “This is an attack on physicians,
since they consider this refusal to be an ‘ethics violation,’” he said. “So
would be refusing to do sterilizations or provide contraception. If you have
one of these ‘violations,’ they would revoke your board certification.
“There
are protections for conscience under the law and in our culture. We were
founded on freedom of religion. It’s ironic that these other, much more recent
rights that have been manufactured — including ‘you can’t discriminate against
someone because of sexual orientation’ — these more recent rights are trumping
and running right over the conscience rights.”
Robert Kumpel is based in
Valdosta, Georgia.
InformationTo read the proposed regulations and to comment on
them, go to HHS.gov.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.