2010 Archive
- A Legal Bombshell Hits Stem Cell Science
- Have Stem Cells Become Passé?
- Illegal Immigration and Catholic Social Teaching
- The Difference God Makes
- How are Christians to Engage the Culture?
- In Vitro Fertilization - Why Not?
- The Long Ascent to Calvary
- Healthcare, Human Life and America
- Why I Didn’t Give Up Facebook for Lent
- Our Sex-Crazed Culture
- The Unimportance of Sex
- Recovery in the Big Easy
- Catholic Teaching on Assisted Nutrition and Hydration
- Haiti
- What’s Wrong With Us?
- Challenging Totalitarianism in 2010
| Protecting Conscience in Healthcare | | Print | |
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An end of term gift from the Bush Administration December 9, 2008 9:45 AM ESTWhen you need a new law to enforce and give teeth to already existing laws, you know you've got a problem. That's why you should be grateful to the out-going Bush administration -- especially if you are a healthcare professional -- that your right to follow the dictate of conscience in the workplace will be newly ensured (even though that right has been guaranteed by law for years now -- at least on paper). The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is expected to enact -- perhaps as soon as this week -- a regulation that will enforce already existing legal protections of healthcare providers' conscience rights. I wrote about the draft regulation last August when it was first released for public comment. [1] The new proposed regulation -- notwithstanding cries of foul play and overreach by the liberal MSM and abortion rights advocacy groups -- simply ensures compliance with existing federal statutes. [2] These statutes, as explained in the draft regulation, prohibit recipients of certain federal funds from coercing individuals into participating in actions they find religiously or morally objectionable. These same provisions also prohibit discrimination on the basis of one's objection to, or participation in, specific procedures, including abortion or sterilization, or one's participation in, or refusal to participate in, abortion or sterilization procedures. In so doing, the new regulation protects the conscience rights of millions of healthcare professionals -- a move that is long over due. Despite the existence of federal statutes (at least one on the books for over three decades) to protect healthcare provider conscience rights, their application has too often been thwarted by minimal public awareness, and by the ever growing and more open hostility towards providers who would exercise their conscience rights. As a lengthy introductory section of the draft rule entitled "The Problem" explains, in our day the healthcare establishment has succumbed in large part to "an increasingly pervasive attitude...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." [3] The proposed rule would ensure that organizations are in compliance with current federal law by doing the following:
The rule has already traversed the proper federal rule-making steps of providing notice and allowing for public comment, and the Bush Administration is expected to release the final rule before Christmas. Once the final rule is issued it takes effect, and has the force of law. Formally overturning the rule would require the same process that it took to enact it, namely: publishing a proposed rule that would overturn the conscience rights protection rule, a period of public comment, and publication of the final rule. Such a process can be accomplished in a matter of months. It may also be possible for the incoming Obama administration to exploit executive procedures in order to prohibit enforcement of the new rule or otherwise render the rule useless. Undercutting the new rule would certainly be a bold move by the Obama administration, and would invite skepticism of the new President's commitment to the very virtue of justice itself. One would hope he shares the conviction that, in our American experiment in ordered liberty, reverence for the domain of conscience has consistently been upheld as a signal dimension of justice. Now, many have decried the proposed HHS regulation suggesting that women will face the prospect of receiving substandard health care as the result of their health care provider's exercise his or her conscience rights. That argument has no legs to stand on when examined from the perspective of the rights and liberties of both patient and health care worker, and the current state of the "market" of our health care system. A patient's "right" of access to various procedures, services or prescriptions - if temporarily limited in some instance by a health care worker's exercise of conscience - is not entirely undermined. Rather, the patient has recourse to the vast system of clinics, hospitals and pharmacies that will service them, including the multitude of women's and family planning clinics available for precisely the services that may be considered objectionable by many in the health care system. |

