What makes it urgent? In a lengthy introductory section entitled "The Problem," the draft reviews a brief litany of recent incidents which would appear to suggest that incisiveness of "an increasingly pervasive attitude," namely, "that healthcare personnel and institutions should be required to violate their consciences by providing or assisting in the provision of controversial medicine or procedures, or else face being blacklisted, excluded from practice, terminated from their jobs, or otherwise subjected to discrimination." Here the draft enumerates, among other instances, a New York Times editorial suggesting that doctors unwilling to violate their consciences (or what the Times editors euphemistically refer to as engaging in a practice that "conflicts" with the physician's "values") should give up the practice of medicine; the recent passage of state laws in New York[2] and California[3] which would require entities such as Catholic Charities to offer employee prescription drug benefits to cover contraception; and a Connecticut law enacted in May 2007 requiring all hospitals - including Catholic ones - to distribute so-called 'emergency contraception' (Plan B) to rape victims.
If the regulation is enacted, federally-insured health plans, hospitals, health clinics and other institutions receiving federal funds will have to certify in writing that they will protect employees' right to conscience or else risk forfeiting federal funding. Of late, I have had to deal personally with a growing number of incidents in which a healthcare professional is essentially being coerced into acting against his or her conscience.[4] For Catholic healthcare professionals this pressure seems to be reaching a breaking point. The struggle to maintain conscience protections in the healthcare professions now looms as one of the next great conflicts in the battle for a culture of life. I salute, commend and support Secretary Leavitt's efforts in that regard.
[1] The Church Amendments (42 U.S.C. § 300a-7), Public Health Service (PHS) Act §245 (42 U.S.C. § 238n), and the Weldon Amendment (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-161, § 508(d), 121 Stat. 1844, 2209).
[2] NY CLS Ins § 3221 (2007).
[3] Cal Ins Code § 10123.196 (2006).
(Column continues below)
Subscribe to our daily newsletter
[4] As noted in the draft regulation, in May 2005, the Catholic Medical Association reported "receiv[ing] numerous reports of pressure and persuasion being exerted on medical students, clerkships, and residents in public and private hospitals to conform to institutional policies and 'accept their share' of duties requiring performance of participation in activities contrary to Catholic ideology."