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Should doctors be forced to abandon their
faith?
Western Standard Magazine, 2004
(Reproduced with permission)
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Introduction: The Christian medical student at the University of Manitoba who is the subject of this story will be credited with having passed his rotation in obstetrics and gynaecology and will graduate from medical school. He had been failed primarily because of differences with his preceptors on issues related to abortion and contraception, and the failing mark was upheld in successive appeals. It is not clear why University authorities decided to accommodate the student, having previously been unwilling to accept his position. The following story was published before the final outcome was made public. [Administrator] |
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by Terry O'Neill During the 2000 election campaign, former prime minister Jean Chretien attacked his rival Stockwell Day, leader of the Canadian Alliance, over his proposal for a referendum on regulating abortion, claiming “we have social peace with that at this moment.” Critics were quick to point out that Chretien’s so-called “social peace” was in fact a government enforced pro-choice ideology, and that the absence of laws regulating abortion were as much a form of public policy as any legislation. Some say the case of a medical student at the University of Manitoba is evidence of what happens to those who buck official policy. The male Christian student received a failing grade after completing his hospital rotation in obstetrics and gynecology because of differences with his teachers on abortion and related issues, says Sean Murphy, administrator of the Protection of Conscience Project based in Powell River, B.C. Murphy is a friend of the would-be doctor,1 who doesn’t want to be identified and is not talking to reporters. After receiving the failing mark last summer, the student appealed the grade three times. In February, he lost his final appeal and cannot graduate from medical school. The unofficial story, reported by local media in Winnipeg, was that Bryan Magwood, the university’s associate dean at the faculty of medicine had suggested that the student failed because he ran afoul of university policy. That policy apparently dictates that med students must inform patients of any and all options available to them that fall within the medical standard of care. So even pro-life students are obligated to tell patients about abortions and, if necessary, refer them to abortionists. Magwood claims that the reports are off-base. “What I can tell you is that the media coverage that has gone out so far
has been incomplete or inaccurate,” he says, “and that we are following this according to our academic policy and procedure.” Beyond
that, he refused to comment on the case, citing privacy concerns. From a Project letter to the Western Standard: 1. . . . In the first place, the Project followed the case from the outset, and the student was provided with the same kind of service extended to others in similar situations. His relationship with the Project has been cordial, but it is incorrect to describe me as "a friend of the would-be doctor." We have never met. [Back] 2. More important, the final paragraph attributes to me statements that I did not make. While I am, nonetheless, in agreement with a number of the points made, I did not suggest that a devout Muslim doctor might refuse to treat women, nor make any statement to a similar effect.[Back] |
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