Obama
Administration to Rescind Bush
Rule on 'Conscience' for Doctors
and Health Care Providers
Part Two of Two
By Dave Andrusko
According to
published reports, the
pro-abortion Administration of
President Barack Obama today
began the process to rescind a
regulation that enforces federal
laws protecting the conscience
rights of doctors and health
care providers. The Washington
Post reported that the first
step was taken this morning when
the Office of Management and
Budget announced that it was
"reviewing a proposal to lift
the controversial 'conscience'
regulation." There is a 30-day
public comment period once the
OMB reviews the proposal and
publishes it in the Federal
Register.
The Post also
reported that an official with
the Health and Human Services
Department, which drafted the
rule change, explicitly said,
"We are proposing rescinding the
Bush rule" [referring to
pro-life President George W.
Bush].
Issued by the
Bush Administration, this
regulation was designed to raise
awareness in the medical
community and general public, as
well as increase compliance with
federal laws protecting doctors
and health care providers from
discrimination in federally
funded health care programs.
Health care providers are
increasingly being pressured to
violate their moral convictions
with regards to abortion.
The
regulations are based on
underlying federal conscience
protection laws that Congress
has enacted, including the 1973
"Church Amendments," the 1996
Public Health Service Act
amendment, and the "Hyde-Weldon
amendment," which was first
added to a funding bill in 2004.
Susan Muskett,
J.D., Senior Legislative Counsel
of the National Right to Life
Committee, said, "These
conscience protection
regulations were carefully
crafted by the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services
after soliciting public comments
and a lengthy period of review.
Once again, the Obama
Administration is doing the
bidding of pro-abortion advocacy
groups, which wish to penalize
health-care providers who refuse
to participate in providing
abortions."
Although
rescinding this federal
regulation does not repeal the
underlying federal laws,
pro-abortion advocacy groups
have targeted the Hyde-Weldon
law for repeal. "No one should
be forced to take a human life
against their moral convictions,
especially not in a federally
funded program," Muskett said.
David Stevens, CEO of the
Christian Medical Association,
criticized the proposal.
"The move to
rescind the healthcare provider
conscience regulation imperils
women's healthcare access,
threatens healthcare
professionals' freedom to
practice medicine according to
ethical standards, and exposes
the myth of moderation in
Obama's abortion policy," he
said in a statement.
"The Obama
administration claims, without
offering a shred of statistical
evidence, that the regulation
has 'created confusion' and will
somehow hinder access to
healthcare. What can be clearer
than not using federal funds to
force healthcare professionals
to violate longstanding
principles of medical ethics
like the Hippocratic Oath, which
guided medicine for over two
millennia? The real threat to
healthcare access is driving out
every healthcare professional
who conscientiously practices
medicine according to
life-affirming ethical
standards."
Stevens also
noted, "An informal survey of
our members showed that over 40
percent report being pressured
to violate ethical standards.
Physicians report losing
positions and promotions because
of their life-affirming views.
Residents report losing training
privileges because they refused
to do abortions. Medical
students report changing career
tracks away from obstetrics for
fear of pressure to do
abortions. The American College
of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists has officially
asserted that it expects every
obstetrician to participate in
abortions, either through
procedure or referral.
"We hear a lot
of rhetoric from abortion
advocates about the government
not interfering with the
physician-patient relationship.
Why is this argument no longer
employed when the physician and
the patient disagree with
abortion on demand? It would
appear that for all the abortion
"choice" rhetoric, "choice" is
really a one-way street. When it
comes to pro-life individuals,
abortion choice quickly turns
into abortion mandate.
"President
Obama and other abortion
advocates would like to maintain
the myth of their moderation on
abortion, talking much about
'reducing the need for
abortion.' Yet they have no
tolerance for moderate abortion
policies like informing parents
when their children seek an
abortion, banning the
essentially infanticidal
partial-birth abortions, or
protecting the civil rights of
healthcare professionals who
follow the Hippocratic Oath.
If you have
thoughts on this, please email
me at
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
Part One |