In what would be a major and
potentially deadly change in American healthcare policy, The House of
Representatives will take up H.R. 358 —The Protect Life Act—this week. The bill
would permit federally funded hospitals to refuse abortion services even
to women who would likely die without the procedure.
As the law currently stands,
hospitals are required by EMTALA to provide emergency care to anyone who walks
through their doors. If a hospital is unable or unwilling to perform a
necessary procedure, it is obligated to stabilize the patient and then transfer
the individual to a facility that can perform the procedure and agrees to do
so. As a result of the EMTALA requirements, the 600 plus Catholic hospitals in
the nation who are unwilling to perform abortions on religious grounds, even in
life-threatening circumstances to the mother, are obligated to transfer that
patient in need of such a procedure to a hospital that agrees to perform the
required operation.
If The Protect Life Act were
to pass, this would no longer be the case. Hospitals that do not care to
perform abortions, for whatever reason and even when the procedure is required
to save the life of the mother, would be legally permitted to simply do
nothing.
While one might anticipate
that hospitals refusing to perform abortions would transfer a patient in
life-threatening circumstances to a facility willing to perform the abortion, I
wouldn't be so sure.
In 2009, a Phoenix-based
Catholic bishop excommunicated Sister Margaret McBride, an administrator at St. Joseph 's Hospital,
for authorizing an abortion in the case of a woman who was suffering from
pulmonary hypertension and was likely to die without the procedure. In stating
his reasons for this extreme act, the Archdiocese issued a statement saying, in
part:
"An unborn child is not a disease. While medical professionals should certainly try to save a pregnant mother's life, the means by which they do it can never be by directly killing her unborn child. The end does not justify the means.
The direct killing of an unborn child is always immoral, no matter the circumstances, and it cannot be permitted in any institution that claims to be authentically Catholic."
Given this line of thought,
should The Protect Life Act become the law, it seems unlikely that such a
Catholic institution would voluntarily send a patient over to another facility
knowing that an abortion was going to take place.
And the bill doesn't stop at
allowing hospitals to let mothers face death. It would also deny federal
funding to a health care plan that offers to pay for abortion services even in
life-threatening circumstances.
Dawn Laguens, executive
vice-president for communications at Planned Parenthood, summed it up quite
nicely:
"This is just a demolition derby for women's health care. To first say, 'We won't even treat you if you show up needing a life-saving abortion,' and then to eliminate health insurance that might have saved your family from bankruptcy is a real one-two gut punch to women in these tough economic times."
So, how is it that the
sponsors and backers of this bill happen to be the same people who constantly
rail against government intruding in our lives yet would now empower medical
facilities to allow a woman to die if their respective religious beliefs do not
match up?
Demolition derby, indeed.
Rick Ungar is a blogger
for Mother Jones. For more
of his stories, click here. To follow him on
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