A Matter of Conscience: Abortion and
Hippocratic Tenets
Part Two of TwoBy Jonathan
Imbody
Editor's note. This first appeared
in the Washington Times and is reprinted with permission.
Americans blanch at abortion coercion
in China, where population control agents force mothers to end the lives of
their unborn babies who exceed the mandated limit of one child per couple.
Yet few Americans realize that abortion-related mandates are also
threatening to shanghai U.S. health care professionals who follow medical
standards such as the Hippocratic Oath.
Conscientious physicians and other
health care professionals are being pressured, under threat of job loss, to
violate medical ethics standards by performing abortions and referring
patients to abortion clinics to do the deed.
Abortion advocates have been lobbying
vociferously to cast abortion as standard medical care and to mandate
abortion participation by all health care professionals. Only a tiny
fraction of U.S. physicians otherwise are willing to violate the Hippocratic
Oath, which has guided medicine for well over two millennia, by
participating in abortions.
The abortion mandate strategy may be
ill-conceived, but unfortunately it is not ill-fated.
Abortion, which neither heals nor
comforts, does not qualify as standard medical care under historical medical
standards; it has only recently and politically infiltrated health care.
Since American health care professionals have long enjoyed a measure of
autonomy in making professional decisions, mandating participation in a
procedure prohibited by long-standing medical ethics standards seems
likewise implausible.
But abortion ideology and zeal have a
way of trumping all notions of ethics and professionalism.
Aggressive abortion mandate advocates
dominate the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), a
highly politicized medical specialty group with vast influence over the
profession of obstetrics and gynecology. Last November, ACOG issued an
official ethics statement tellingly entitled, "The Limits of Conscientious
Refusal in Reproductive Medicine." The ACOG statement ignores the role of
objective standards in conscientious objections to abortion. ACOG instead
denigrates conscience as a mere subjective "sentiment." In reality, however,
health care professionals who object to abortion do so not because of
subjective feelings but because killing the unborn contravenes Hippocratic,
biblical and other life-affirming objective ethical standards.
By contrast, abortion ideology rests
on the subjective, unanchored notion of "privacy" and "patient autonomy." By
ripping conscience from its foundation of objective standards and demoting
it to the level of subjective feelings, ACOG paints abortion objections as a
clash between a physician's feelings and a patient's autonomy. With autonomy
elevated as the ethical trump card, physicians and all ethical standards
must bow in submission.
Having demoted conscience to the
subjective realm and elevated patient autonomy to a position of
unchallengeable supremacy, ACOG opposes faith-based ethical standards as "an
imposition of religious or moral beliefs on patients." ACOG even incredibly
contends that pro-life obstetricians should not only be required to perform
or refer for abortions; they should also relocate their practices close to
abortionists to make such referrals more convenient.
Given the official link between ACOG
ethics positions and physician board certification, obstetricians who refuse
to follow ACOG's abortion mandate now presumably stand to lose their
hospital privileges and their livelihood. Medical ethics thus would be
turned upside down, as life-honoring physicians lose the ability to practice
medicine simply for following the Hippocratic Oath.
Meanwhile, the abortion mandate
movement will soon tap potentially irrepressible numbers in Congress and
powerful advocates in the White House and the administration.
President-elect Barack Obama, Sen.
Hillary Clinton and other abortion advocates have strenuously opposed a
modest U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regulation that
would ensure freedom of conscience in health care. The regulation would
finally implement over 35 years of federal civil rights law aimed at
protecting health care professionals from abortion-related coercion.
The HHS regulation, expected to be
finalized before Dec. 20, could be overturned by a pro-abortion Congress and
president, either through new legislation or a new regulation.
Mandating abortion participation in
health care is rife with irony. Most Americans easily recognize the
hypocrisy of forcing "pro-choice" ideology on all health care professionals.
The injustice of ending the lives of innocent unborn children has only
persisted in this country, where most citizens oppose abortion on demand,
under the smokescreen of choice.
By driving out pro-life obstetricians
and gynecologists who refuse to participate in abortions, abortion mandates
would ironically decrease women's access to some of the most conscientious
and compassionate physicians in America, many of whom volunteer free medical
services to poor women. Abortion mandates threaten to shut down thousands of
life-affirming, faith-based hospitals and clinics that provide care in some
of the nation's most underserved communities.
Maybe that's what it will take for
Americans to penetrate the fog of abortion propaganda and recognize that
breaching the foundational right to life imperils all other rights.
Jonathan Imbody is vice president of
government relations for the Christian Medical Association.
Part One |