Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- When You're Cutting Social Security, 'Wealthy' Begins at $25K
- With Little More Than a Note, Obama Deploys US Troops To Niger
- Stripped of 'Country of Origin' Label, US Agrees to Sell Tear Gas to Egypt
- The 'Land of 10,000 Lakes' Is Running Dry
- 5 Reasons Why the Keystone XL Pipeline is Bad for the Economy
Popular content
Today's Top News
Does Bush Proposal Threaten Access To The Pill?
WASHINGTON - A Bush administration proposal aimed at protecting health-care workers who object to abortion, and to birth-control methods they consider tantamount to abortion, has escalated a bitter debate over the balance between religious freedom and patients' rights.The Department of Health and Human Services is reviewing a draft regulation that would deny federal funding to any hospital, clinic, health plan or other entity that does not accommodate employees who want to opt out of participating in care that runs counter to their personal convictions, including providing birth-control pills, IUDs and the Plan B emergency contraceptive.
Conservative groups, abortion opponents and some members of Congress are welcoming the initiative as necessary to safeguard doctors, nurses and other health workers who, they say, are increasingly facing discrimination because of their beliefs or are being coerced into delivering services they find repugnant.
But the draft proposal has sparked intense criticism by family planning advocates, women's health activists, and members of Congress who say the regulation would create overwhelming obstacles for women seeking abortions and birth control.
There is also deep concern that the rule could have far-reaching, but less obvious, implications. Because of its wide scope and because it would -- apparently for the first time -- define abortion in a federal regulation as anything that affects a fertilized egg, the regulation could raise questions about a broad spectrum of scientific research and care, critics say.
"The breadth of this is potentially immense," said Robyn S. Shapiro, a bioethicist and lawyer at the Medical College of Wisconsin. "Is this going to result in a kind of blessed censorship of a whole host of areas of medical care and research?"
Critics charge that the proposal is the latest example of the administration politicizing science to advance ideological goals.
"They are manipulating the system by manipulating the definition of the word 'abortion,' " said Susan F. Wood, a professor at George Washington University who resigned from the Food and Drug Administration over the delays in approving the nonprescription sale of Plan B. "It's another example of this administration's disregard for science and medicine in how agencies make decisions."
The proposal is outlined in a 39-page draft regulation that has been circulated among several HHS agencies. The FDA has not objected, but several officials at the National Institutes of Health said that the agency had expressed serious concerns.
"This is causing a lot of distress," said one NIH researcher who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal discussions. "It's a redefinition of abortion that does not match any of the current medical definitions. It's ideologically based and not based on science and could interfere with the development of many new therapies to treat diseases."
Since a copy of the document leaked earlier this month, outside advocates and scientists have voiced growing alarm that the regulation could inhibit research in areas including stem cells, infertility and even such unrelated fields as cancer.
Dozens of members of Congress have sent letters of protest to HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt, as have scores of major medical and health groups that say their supporters have sent Congress, the White House and HHS thousands of letters protesting the proposal.
HHS officials declined to discuss the draft, saying it is in the very early stages of review. But HHS issued a statement that reads in part:
"Over the past three decades, Congress has passed several anti-discrimination laws to protect institutional and individual health care providers participating in federal programs. HHS has an obligation to enforce these laws, and is exploring a number of options."
The draft states that numerous cases have been reported of health-care workers being "required to violate their consciences by providing or assisting in the provision of controversial medicine or procedures." It adds that many states have recently passed laws requiring health plans to pay for contraception, pharmacists to fill prescriptions for birth control, and hospitals to offer Plan B to women who have been raped.
"In general, the Department is concerned that the development of an environment in the health care industry that is intolerant of certain religious beliefs, ethnic and cultural traditions, and moral convictions may discourage individuals from underrepresented and diverse backgrounds from entering health care professions," the document states.
The regulation would require any entity receiving HHS funding to certify that it does not discriminate against organizations or individuals who do not want to provide services they consider objectionable.
The most controversial section defines abortion as "any of the various procedures -- including the prescription, dispensing and administration of any drug or the performance of any procedure or any other action -- that results in the termination of life of a human being in utero between conception and natural birth, whether before or after implantation."
That definition would include most forms of hormonal birth control and the IUD, which most major medical groups believe do not constitute abortion because they primarily affect ovulation or fertilization and not an embryo once it has implanted in the womb.
The regulation would apply to anyone who participates in "any activity with a logical connection to a procedure, health service or health service program, or research activity. . . . This includes referral, training and other arrangements of the procedure, health service, or research activity."
If the administration decides to adopt the regulation, it would undergo public comment and further review before becoming final.
Critics argue that the broad definitions of abortion and the types of workers who could object would cover everyone from the top doctor at a hospital to the janitor.
Cecile Richards of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America said, "At a time when access to health care is at an all-time low, the idea that the Bush administration would be creating more barriers is frankly incredible."
The regulation could trump dozens of state laws that require health plans to cover birth control, pharmacists to fill prescriptions for contraceptives, and hospitals to offer emergency contraception to women who have been raped, critics said.
"You could imagine a group of people with less than honorable intentions seeking to get hired at a family planning clinic with the specific objective of obstructing access. Under this regulation, there is little you could do about it," said Jill Morrison of the National Women's Law Center.
Others said the rule could have additional implications, including justifying discrimination against gays, single women or others seeking health care.
"As soon as you have a definition in one part of federal law, it can become the inspiration for the reinterpretation of other statutes," said R. Alta Charo, a lawyer and bioethicist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Supporters dismissed such predictions.
"This would essentially simply require people to comply with laws that they have been required to comply with for decades," said M. Casey Mattox of the Christian Legal Society's Center for Law and Religious Freedom. "That does not mean any organization or state can't keep doing exactly what it's been doing. It means they have to make room for people who have sincere moral or ethical concerns about doing something."
Conservative groups including the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Concerned Women for America and the Catholic Medical Association said the regulation is needed.
David Christensen of the Family Research Council said: "Health-care professionals should not be forced to engage in an action that they see is the taking of a human life. Federal funds shouldn't be used for that kind of pressure."
Christensen and others said the regulations spell out legitimate differing views about what constitutes abortion and when life begins.
Richard S. Myers, a law professor at Ave Maria School of Law in Ann Arbor, Mich., said: "Religious freedom is an important part of the history of this country. People who have a religious or moral belief should not be forced to participate in an act they find abhorrent."
© 2008 Washington Post
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


97 Comments so far
Show Allmanipulating the definition of the word 'abortion,'
There is a sort of symmetry to the way the US government redefines what to most of the world are common widely understood terms, don't you think?
can i stop paying my taxes because killing people who live on top of some oil runs counter to my personal convictions?
Why is this hard to figure out?
If you have religious convictions that prevent you from performing certain medical procedures, DON'T SELECT THAT FIELD! Gee.
If you are a conscientious objector, maybe joining the Army isn't for you.
If you have an aversion to sex, maybe adult film isn't your best career move.
Some people are just plain stupid.
These religious idiots need to all get fired so they can select a field that they CAN actually do their jobs.
In any case, if you suddenly "discover Jesus", "see the light", or have any other mental breakdown and find out that you can't do your job, change your career field. It doesn't get any simpler than that.
TheLorax - problem is, these people want to control the lives of those who don't believe their way - since burning them isn't an option. What they're pushing for is a total ban on any kind of birth control; total takeover of education; and actually the whole country - make that world.
hazmat - don't see why not! I don't want to have my tax dollars going to destroy other countries and its people, nor do I want my tax dollars going to pay these religious fanatics so they can push their agenda even further.
Wasn't there something about the increase in births largest since the end of WWII on here recently? Anybody wanna bet on who all those babies belong to? More little "soldiers of god" to make sure there'll be plenty of "fodder" born too to fight the "holy" wars they'll continue to push for.
I guess whacking off is next… the inquisition is not far behind…
There must be something important going on if they drag out this ancient debate again. I'll bet we will soon find out how much Obama hates little babies. I wonder what the gov is deflecting attention away from anyways?
And here we have yet another reason to hate Bush and his lousy administration--let me count the ways. The November election can't come fast enough for me!
Any law, regulation, etc. dreamed up by the Bush administration is bound to be bad, bad, bad.
Wake up, America! Haven't you learned anything over the past eight years?
Good job The Lorax. The fact that they couldn't think of this on their own says something about their collective brain.
"If you have religious convictions that prevent you from performing certain medical procedures, DON'T SELECT THAT FIELD! Gee." Ok. So what about the tens of millions of us whose religious convictions are violated over our tax dollars going to Iraq to kill people? Or those federal workers whose conscience is violated by them carrying out orders in the the continuance of the illegal and immoral war in Iraq?
isn't that pretty much their entire game-plan?
the neocons are greedy and murderous and see a way to make a buck by sending two oil men to the presidecy and vice-presidency.
the pro-lifers will kill 1.2 million iraqis with a smile on their faces.
...and will change a law allowing them to legally bend the country to their ideas of right and wrong.
'hey, why stand outside picketing with a picture of a dead baby?'
'...when i can legally get a job there, and tell that 14 year-old rape victim how she's going to burn in hell for her sins' or however else that might turn out.
no thanks. i'll take one of the arrogant intellectuals, please.
thanks.
and about "The November election can't come fast enough for me!"
unless "postponed" by bush invoking the NSPD 51, we're only 96 days away, baby!
96!!!
IMPEACH DUBYA AND DICKIE NOW!
I understand, but disagree with the pro-life position. But, Jesus, you are crazy if you think the pill is morally repugnant!
Maybe we should be more accomodating to people who refuse to work because they find capitalism morally repugnant. Anyone?
Bush wants to ban Abortion and contraception so our country can have more babies born which means more people to join the military war machine, and more people to get TAX money from. Why else would he support this?
MONEY, MONEY, MONEY and future MONEY..this is what drives this man and the more people the more money he can milk for our government!
do you really believe that criticalthinktank?
Bush doesn't believe in abortion and contraception and wants to run an authoritarian government that has strict control of people and their bodies.
Redefining words is nothing new in the brave new world of the Orwellian culture fostered by Bush and the rest of the imbeciles on the paranoid right. It's astonishing that after eight years of this insanity, the Democrats can't get off their asses and put an end to this craziness. Why can't meaningful opposition form to run these bastards out of office?
"define abortion in a federal regulation as anything that affects a fertilized egg"
Are the EPA and FDA in on this? Every household chemical and food additive will affect a fertalized egg. Since there is no Safeway can the clerk at the checkout stand refuse to sell anything to women because it might affect a fertilized egg? Are Monsanto, Conagra and Clorox abortionists?
What will Bush's sadistic misogynists do with post-menopausal women? Will our Department of Justice jail them or grind them up like old milk cows?
America's government has gone criminally insane!
"These religious idiots need to all get fired so they can select a field that they CAN actually do their jobs."
The only field of endeavor these people are good for is to become Crusaders. Bring back all the soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan and send these fevered, tight-ass jokers instead. None will survive and perhaps then the so-called religious right will disappear from American politics and never stain our rapidly declining country again.
P.S. This also fits in perfectly with George Wanker Bush's lack of interest in sex. Drinking and murder are apparently his standard cheap thrills that take the place of (expletive deleted).
Time to abort Bush's presidency and look into the possibility of performing a post-natal abortion on him. I'll bet old Mama Barbara would go along with it. What a horrendous waste of flesh and blood her asshole son is.
Is this being dragged out now to influence the Elections?
Help remind the Right what makes them Right by Polarizing people and allowing the Fundamenetalist Mega-Preachers to Whip up Hate and voting loyalties.
The timing of this Creeping Fascism is Rovian.
McCain and even the AdSinistration have co-opted some of OboBomba's rhetoric recently.
Here is a wedge issue that will nicely portray the Baby-Killing Democrats by their Defenders, the Sainted and Holy Christian Right and their Republican Loyalists.
Sounds sexist to me. Any restrictions on vasectomies? Why not?
So many parents should have had an abortion
the whole bush family
Cheney
Rove
Rice
Rummy
the rest of the inner circle we never see
McCain
anymore?
Another even worse ploy Amendment 48 here in Colorado will be on the ballot. These people will never stop. Info on this below.
http://oakcreekforum.blogspot.com/2008/07/amendment-48-crazy-bastards.html
Downwinder July 31st, 2008 4:50 pm
Sounds sexist to me. Any restrictions on vasectomies? Why not?
Very good point, but don't forget if those who object to the pill on the grounds that it prevents preg's will also object to vasectomies on the same grounds. Thing is a vasectomy can be done in any doctor's office in less than an hour. The pill needs to be prescribed. I wonder if this decision will also prevent women from getting their own tubes tied/cut?
I hope so. My wife just had a cancer operation up here in Canada. The total cost out of pocket was 5$ thats right 5 bucks and that so she could have a phone in her room. She still has 100% coverage as it does not affect the coverage at all. It is a great feeling to know if you get real sick it is covered and you won't have to take out a loan or sell your house. America has to wake up as they spend more and get less
Cleaning out a cat box has the potential to affect a human embryo. Therefore, unless cats can be trained not to sh*t in litter boxes, the government should ban cats. Admittedly, the last time a virtual theocracy banned cats, the result was the Black Death, but you can't be put off by the possibility of a little plague. After all, we're talking about the sanctity of human life, here!
As I learned in finance, it's all about propping up business "wholesale" way. Produce more babies out of control just like in China, India, and the Middle East and what big government gets is more money because more programmed-to-be-numb-in-thinking fundies will blindly fight these wars for resource exploitation and profiteering. It happened to hemp and it will happen to healthcare not just against women but all of us in the end unless you fight back.
Autonomy comes from control over one's body and its functions. This legislation is a means to push women back into caves, and/or remain barefoot and pregnant. It's disgusting!
The thing is, apart from the false rites of authoritarians who think it's THEIR business and THEIR right to tell others how to live (and stand together as all clones so easily do to foment legislation that furthers their objectives), is the sinister disguise that this whole "right to life" thing is REALLY about. It's a mask over a right to KILL society. Is there any single example anyone can think of that shows the slightest interest on the part of Bush and all the amoral sell-outs he's placed to head the various departments that are supposed to PROTECT public well being and safety? The EPA is a sham, the FDA is another one, instead of true law enforcement we have the mangled homeland security state aiming at its own, and the list goes on ad nauseum.
Just as soldiers are taught to fold their sheets a certain way and look proud in their impeccably neat and clean uniforms and shined boots to HIDE the filth of human splattered remains these costumes ultimately serve, so too does the right to life movement place over a national policy of war at any and all provocations a mask that would appear to give a damn about living beings.
FARCE THEATER! Sometimes I wish there was no reincarnation as it's so clear the Inquisitors are back... can't you just see Rove wearing the robes, delighted to send beautiful young women (and their male suitors perhaps) to the latest torture chamber by clammoring that it's God's will, that they have sinned. Sometimes being aware on this backwards planet is too much to bear...
PS: Excellent points: WILMOOR, CEDAR & JOZEF
Bush & Co. redefined the word TORTURE, so I guess they now want to redefine ABORTION as well.
Here we go, the return of Comstock Law is next.
Hollow point,
Oh, you smug Canadians! ;-)
Many of us Americans have woken up as we "spend more and get less." But, short of making a run for the border (and unfortunately, I'm closer to Mexico than Canada), there's only so much we can do.
My friends and I joke that the Canadians should be guarding their borders from all of the Americans trying to sneak in and get healthcare.
Lisa at 4:38, Great post. Rove and the boys could care less about life (human or otherwise) before or after birth. Their game is to splinter the poor and various shades of middle class, whose interests would be totally denied in a McCain (3rd Bush administration), with as many wedge issues they can get the right-wing talk show hacks to bleat about before election day.
Siouxrose, very excellent post!
NMlib July 31st, 2008 5:45 pm
Hollow point,
Oh, you smug Canadians!
My friends and I joke that the Canadians should be guarding their borders from all of the Americans trying to sneak in and get healthcare.
We do, actually there's lots of lawsuits and collection agencies trying to get to the yanks who've come up here expecting not to pay for anything...
One of America's founding fathers spoke to what is at the center of this issue --
"Our particular principles of religion are a subject of accountability to our god alone. I enquire after no man's and trouble none with mine; nor is it given to us in this life
to know whether yours or mine, our friend's or our foe's, are exactly the right." -- Thomas Jefferson
Can we expand this idea further? For instance, if workers in such a facility have personal beliefs that they would rather treat patients with medical pot instead of pharmaceuticals, surely they should have the same rights?
So, I'd like to be a Christian Scientist and have a full-time job in a hospital :-) Under the Bush administration rule, does that mean I'd take home a paycheck even if I refused to administer most conventional medical treatments and instead opted to pray for the patients? (I may be mischaracterizing CS, but there are religions that oppose most conventional treatments).
How about health care workers who's personal beliefs conflict with DEA limits on the amounts of pain meds than can be given? Shouldn't they have the same rights?
Or, how about health care workers who's personal beliefs conflict with the law on a patient's right to die?
I wonder who in George's cabinet thinks up these reasons for more people to see him as a vile pig.
Or, of course the most obvious would be workers in clinics who disagree with the conservative position that only abstinence should be mentioned as a birth control method? Do those workers have the same rights to uphold their personal beliefs?
>>hazmat - can i stop paying my taxes because killing people who live on top of some oil runs counter to my personal convictions?<<
Very very well put. You take a job, then you need to be able to do the job. Full stop. If you don't want to hand out contraception, then go to work in a Catholic hospital.
"I wonder who in George's cabinet thinks up these reasons for more people to see him as a vile pig."
The guy working on the next election who's trying to find whatever narrow difference there are between Democrats and Republicans. You gotta feel sorry for that guy, since there are so few differences on the big policies like trade and taxes and war. So this is what they have to work with.
skippyagog,
Well, it isn't me! I'm near the other border.
Maybe you Canadians should start squawking about the "illegal immigrants"!
This is great!
My religion says "thou shall not kill"
Republicans support this war where a million plus have been killed.
Now as a health care worker, by federal law, I cannot be fired for refusing to treat Republicans.
Come to think of it, Democrats are just as much to blame.
So I cannot be fired for refusing to treat Democrats either.
I will just sit back and collect my paycheck and only treat a Green or a Quaker once every few weeks. Game of cards anyone?
Sweet.
Thank you Dubya.
Clark Kent,
Or as a Jehovah's Witness, you can't give a blood transfusion.
To listen to these 'family values' characters one would think there are hoards of abortionists running around the country forcing women to have abortions. If you don't want an abortion.....don't have one!
The Abortion issue is an issue ONLY THOSE WITH A WOMB are truly qualified to address much less answer.
The "Religious ones" are the only vocal group concerning this matter and my observation so far has been----it is just a bunch of men; all of them with small minds that they have clouded even more with these ridiculous childish thoughts of "Gods" "gender" which they are SURE is male.
Therefore logic would have one to notice very readily that ANY man could NOT possibly have an opinion that would be based in reality when the question comes up "oh what are those women supposed to do with those "wombs"-
If anyone needs to make a "national issue of it" then it should by rights be a "WOMENS NATIONAL ISSUE"---since they HAVE wombs, they are QULIFIED BY THAT ALONE to speak with authority and knowledge and experience about "WOMBS".-------
My only advice to the WOMEN of the NATION is that THEY are the QUALIFIED INDIVIDUALS AND GROUP TO EVEN DISCUSS THE ISSUE; and should do with the issue whatever they wish---and tell the MEN who do not HAVE WOMBS----to "stick it where the sun don't shine".
In all seriousness, this is an issue that only women are qualified to even discuss. If there is no question among them, then the men of this nation should accept that and go on with their own lives.
In my Tribal tradition we recognize that the women are the only future of our people and without them we would be extinct. None of the men I know would even think of questioning who is the source of our power. These are wise men who do not delve in areas they are not qualified in. But that is why we will survive those who do not recognize the true source of their people's power. Your women.
To those men out there.
Leave them alone about the abortion issue; if there is a question about it they will answer it.
Thanks for your time.
Republican platform: restricting women's reproductive freedom
Viagra is covered by medical insurance but birth control is not. Repigs are sexist to the core. Which reminds me, what was that McCain called his wife? Oh yes, C**t. And he called Asians "gooks." Racist and sexist.
http://www.crooksandliars.com/2008/07/17/jack-cafferty-viagra-is-for-a-medical-condition-birth-control-is-a-lifestyle-choice/