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Encyclicals

Evangelium Vitae - The Gospel of Life
Pope John Paul II, 25 March, 1995
(Extracts concerning conflict between law of the state and conscience)

Papal Statements

 

John Paul II: A Middle Path Which Opens Up Before Catholic Health Workers

Doctrinal Notes

 

Doctrinal Note on some questions regarding the participation of Catholics in political life
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.  November 24, 2002

Moral Reflections

  Moral Reflections on Vaccines Prepared from Cells Derived from Aborted Human Foetuses
 

Pastoral Directives

 

Charter for Health Care Workers (Pontifical Council for Pastoral Assistance)

Statement on the Formation of Conscience (Canadian Catholic Conference)

 

Episcopal Statements

 

Pennsylvania Catholic Conference (USA)

New York State Catholic Conference (USA)

United States Catholic Conference Re: Kansas Health Care Providers Rights of Conscience Act

Conscience Clauses and the Challenge of Co-operation in a Pluralistic Society

Freedom of Conscience: A Pastoral Statement from the Bishops of the Arizona Catholic Conference

Conscience: the Aboriginal Vicar of Christ (George Cardinal Pell, Sydney, Australia)

The moral conscience in ethics and the contemporary crisis of authority (Auxiliary Bishop Anthony Fisher, Sydney, Australia)

The Holy See

  Presentation of Permanent Observer of the Holy See to UN General Assembly Committee

Miscellaneous Statements

 

 

John Paul II: A Middle Path Which Opens Up Before Catholic Health Workers

The Fundamental Human Right to Practise and be Trained According to Conscience

Institutional Formal and Material  Co-operation (with evil)

Statement on the So-Called 'Morning After Pill' (Pontifical Academy for Life)

Rights, the Person and Conscience in the Catechism

Freedom to Choose God

Catholic Health Association Supports Medically Appropriate, Morally Acceptable Care for Sexual Assault Victims

Catholic Health Care Providers and the Issue of Emergency Contraception: Offering Compassion and Truth in Cases of Rape and Sexual Assault

Choosing between good and evil

The Role of the Christian Conscience in the Promotion of Life in Relation to Developing Countries

Pennsylvania Catholic Conference

 

Viewpoint: Newsletter of the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference
Volume 14; Issue 3, Summer 1998
(Reproduced with permission)

MANAGED CARE BILLS AMENDED: CONSCIENCE PROTECTION ADDED

The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference and Pennsylvania Catholic Health Association have been working with legislators to ensure the continuation of Catholic health care in Pennsylvania through conscience protection amendments to two managed care bills currently in the state Senate.

Managed care plans typically contract with health care facilities to provide services to their plan subscribers. The PCC and PCHA have advocated conscience clause protection for health care facilities to protect them from being discriminated against in contracting because they do not provide a "full range of services." The "full service" that managed care organizations may seek can include abortions, sterilizations, family planning services, and other activities religious institutions would find ethically objectionable.

The conscience clause, as amended into Senate Bill 100, the Quality Healthcare Protection Act, and House Bill 977, the Managed Care Accountability Act, would protect the rights of hospitals, nursing homes, or managed care organizations that refuse to provide, arrange, or pay for health care services that violate religious or moral beliefs.

Without conscience protection, Catholic health care providers could be marginalized, and due to patient population loss, be forced to curtail or discontinue services, according to Sister Clare Christi Schiefer, OSF, president of the PCHA. Both Sister Schiefer and PCC legal counsel Richard Connell, Esq. have been working to protect the interests of PA's Catholic health care facilities, which served more than 3.6 million people in 1996.

Representative Tom Tangretti (D-Westmoreland) was instrumental in having the conscience protection language amended to both bills. "We're grateful to Rep. Tangretti for his commitment to protecting the continuation of Catholic health care," said PCC Executive Director Robert O'Hara. The amended conscience clauses clearly require managed care plans to disclose any coverage limitations, and permit direct access for those services not provided because of moral or religious reasons. Rep. Tangretti's amendment assures that a plan will not be over-compensated when, for reasons of conscience, it does not provide all services.

Because of the broad support for managed care reform legislation in the House, Senate, and governor's office, some type of managed care legislation may likely become law this session.

 

New York State Catholic Conference

 

Precis: Protection of Conscience for Health Care Providers

Summary
In the wake of legislative proposals that would force believing Catholics to violate the teaching of their Church or drive them from the health care ministry (a word that expresses a perspective quite different from profession), the Conference asserts the need to safeguard the freedom of conscience of "health care providers, plans and contractors".
In the wake of legislative proposals that would force believing Catholics to violate the teaching of their Church or drive them from the health care ministry (a word that expresses a perspective quite different from profession), the Conference asserts the need to safeguard the freedom of conscience of "health care providers, plans and contractors".

Conference Position
The Conference expresses a determination to promote and defend human dignity, ensure adequate health care for the poor and underinsured, and exercise "responsible stewardship" of health care resources.
The Conference expresses a determination to promote and defend human dignity, ensure adequate health care for the poor and underinsured, and exercise "responsible stewardship" of health care resources.

Guidelines for the practice of Catholic health care specifically preclude participation in abortion, contraceptive sterilization, and artificial contraception. These guidelines, the Conference notes, are not illegal.   It insists that Catholics who follow the "centuries-old tradition" of health care should not have to compromise Catholic social and moral teaching.

Refer to the complete text of the statement on the website of the New York State Catholic Conference .
 

 


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