CMA physicians: Without Strong
Conscience Protections, Bill
Imperils Poor Patients
Part Four of Four
Editor's note. The following
statement was issued earlier
this morning.
Washington, DC--The nation's
largest association of
faith-based physicians, the
17,000-member Christian Medical
Association (CMA, www.cmda.org
), today lamented the passage of
a sweeping healthcare overhaul
bill that lacks strong
conscience protections, saying
the gap could lead to a crisis
of health care for poor
patients. "Millions of poor
patients and those in medically
underserved areas currently
depend on care from faith-based
hospitals, clinics and
physicians who follow
life-affirming ethical standards
such as those found in the
Hippocratic oath and the
Judeo-Christian Scriptures,"
noted CMA CEO Dr. David Stevens.
"National polling reveals that
95 percent of faith-based
physicians say they will be
forced to leave medicine without
conscience protections. Since
the bill passed by Congress does
not include strong conscience
protections, it opens the door
to an increase in discrimination
against physicians, hospitals
and clinics that decline to
participate in abortion and
other morally controversial
procedures."
While several longstanding
federal laws passed on a
bipartisan basis over the past
35 years have offered strong
conscience protections,
President Obama has announced
plans to rescind the only
federal regulation that
implements those laws. The
Senate bill passed by the House
on Sunday does not prohibit
discrimination by the government
or healthcare facilities against
healthcare professionals who
attempt to follow their
conscience on abortion and other
morally controversial
procedures. The Senate had
declined to pass a strong
conscience-protecting amendment
offered by one of its two
physicians, Oklahoma Republican
Tom Coburn.
Dr. Stevens added, "The
last-minute deal for an
Executive Order relating to
abortion and conscience--the
deal that changed the 'No' votes
of pro-life Democrats to
'Yes'--was like trading a
birthright for a mess of
pottage. The executive order,
which added no additional
conscience protections
whatsoever, can be changed
tomorrow by this President, or
later by any subsequent
President, with the stroke of a
pen. The healthcare bill,
meanwhile, becomes permanent
law."
CMA summarized its position on
other aspects of the healthcare
bill, including government
funding of abortion, in a recent
letter to Congress . CMA also
coordinates the Freedom2Care
(www.Freedom2Care.org) coalition
of 50 organizations supporting
conscience rights in health
care.
Please be sure to visit our new
information source
www.nationalrighttolifenews.org.
Part One
Part Two
Part Three |