Update 2013-07-01
		1 July, 2013
		Covering the period from 1 May, 2013 to 30 June, 2013
		
	 
		
			1.  By Region/Country
			Visit the Project News/Blog for details.
			
	Australia
	A physician in Melbourne, Australia, has openly defied the State of 
	Victoria law that requires physicians who object to abortion to refer 
	patients to colleagues who will provide the service.  Dr. Mark Hobart refused 
	to refer a couple who wanted to abort a girl because they wanted a boy. [Newstalk]
	
				Belgium
	
				Only 400 of 20,000 Flemish physicians are trained to provide 
				euthanasia.  It appears that most physicians do not want to 
				be directly involved with it.  In consequence, the 400 are 
				called upon frequently to provide the required second opinion 
				and sometimes the lethal injection.  Confirming the 
				reluctance of physicians to participate in the procedure, Dr. 
				Sarah Van Laer complains that "there are too few doctors ready 
				to perform euthanasia" and that this is a"badly underestimated 
				problem." [Bioedge] 
	Canada
	The government of Quebec has introduced a bill to legalize euthanasia in 
	the province, despite the continuing criminal prohibition of the procedure. 
	An Act respecting end-of-life care (Bill 52) is intended to permit 
	physicians, in defined circumstances, to kill their patients as part of the 
	redefined practice of medicine ("medical aid in dying"; MAD). However, the 
	procedure cannot become part of medical practice in Quebec unless the 
	medical profession itself (broadly speaking) formally accepts it and 
	delivers it through the structures and powers established for the delivery 
	of health care. If Bill 52 passes, health care providers and others who want 
	no part of euthanasia will find their working environments increasingly 
	controlled by a MAD matrix functioning within this system.  Moreover, 
	having formally approved of euthanasia, the medical establishment will be at 
	particular pains to defend and enforce the decision. In the end, freedom of 
	conscience for Quebec health care workers who object to euthanasia may come 
	to mean nothing more than the freedom to find another job, or the freedom to 
	leave the province. [See 
	Redefining the practice of medicine: Winks and nods and euthanasia in Quebec]
	European Union
	The Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians 
	released a report 
	describing 41 examples of national laws with adverse effects on Christians 
	in more than 15 European Countries. Additionally, 169 cases of intolerance 
	against Christians in the EU – area in 2012 are portrayed.  The Holy 
	See has denounced 
	European discrimination against and intolerance of Christians.
	Ireland
	The Protection 
	of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013 will permit abortions when there 
	is a "real and substantial risk" to the life of a woman by reason of 
	physical illness or suicidal ideation. The Act  includes a
	
	protection of conscience provision that is limited to medical 
	practitioners, midwives and nurses.  A provision that denied freedom of 
	conscience to institutions has been dropped.  However, no conscientious 
	objection will be allowed in emergencies when the mother's life is in 
	immediate danger.  
	It is far from certain how much difficulty the mandatory referral 
	requirement will cause, since the Act envisions abortion only in 
	circumstances involving a substantial risk to the mother's life.  This is 
	very rare, and in such circumstances there is much less likelihood of 
	conscientious objection, so the provision may not prove to be troublesome in 
	practice.
	On the other hand, government comments accompanying the earlier "heads of 
	bill" noted that medical practitioners do not need to be of the opinion that 
	the risk to the woman's life "is inevitable or immediate." The more 
	broadly this interpretation is construed, the more likely it is that 
	conflicts of conscience will occur, and the greater will be the surrounding 
	controversy.  Irish physicians speaking to an early draft of the 
	legislation expressed 
	differences of opinion about grounds for abortion.
	Italy
	Large numbers of Italian obstetricians are reported to be refusing to 
	provide abortion for reasons of conscience - up to 80% of practitioners in 
	some areas. Critics are demanding that steps be taken to ensure "access to 
	abortion," which may generate pressure to suppress freedom of conscience. [RTE;
	
	Morning Ireland] 
	Philippines
	In order to simplify and expedite the hearing scheduled for 9 July to 
	review the
	
	controversial Reproductive Health law, the Supreme Court of the 
	Philippines has proposed 
	that the petitioners for and against the bill concentrate on three 
	constitutional themes during their oral submissions:
	
		- proscription of involuntary servitude 
- equal protection clause (right to life, freedom of religion, natural 
		law) 
- freedom of speech (academic freedom) 
The suggestion by the court to include the proscription of involuntary 
	servitude as one of the constitutional themes could be interpreted two ways 
	and could include arguments of two kinds. The first is a claim that 
	compelling someone to do something contrary to his conscientious convictions 
	is a form of involuntary servitude. The second is a claim that a pregnancy 
	that results from difficulty accessing contraception and/or abortion is a 
	form of involuntary servitude.  In either case, the reference to the 
	constitutional proscription of involuntary servitude is of particular 
	interest because of a similar proscription in the 13th Amendment to the 
	Constitution of the United States.
	United Kingdom
	The Family Planning Association has encouraged women to leave a medical 
	practice in south London after anonymous complaints were reported in the 
	media that some physicians in the clinic are unwilling to prescribe the 
	morning-after pill for reasons of conscience. [The 
	Independent]
	The National Health Service of Greater Glasgow and Clyde, 
	regional provider of state health care, will attempt to overturn an
	
	appeal court ruling favourable to freedom of conscience for health care 
	workers by appealing to Britain's Supreme Court.  Two midwives who, for 
	reasons of conscience, refused to participate in the supervision and support 
	of staff providing abortions successfully appealed a 
	lower court ruling against them.  The judgement of the appeal court 
	was given in April.  [Irish 
	Post]
	A bill introduced in the House of Lords by Lord 
	Falconer proposes to legalize assisted suicide.  It includes a
	
	protection of conscience provision to protect those who do not wish to
	participate  in the procedure.  Participation is 
	the central issue in the midwives case noted above.
United States
	The Department of Health and Human Services has confirmed a
	
	regulation that will require businesses with over 50 employees to 
	provide health insurance for birth control and surgical sterilization, even 
	if they object to doing so for reasons of conscience.  The regulations 
	includes exemptions for objecting "religious employers" (largely limited to 
	houses of worship) and objecting religious non-profit organizations.  
	Nonetheless, the continued demand that objecting business owners be forced to 
	comply and the nature of the exemptions remain unacceptable to many 
	religious organizations.  Catholic and Baptist leaders have 
	collaborated in writing a
	
	letter of protest to Congress.  American Catholic bishops have been adamant 
	that the HHS regulation is unacceptable. There are now 61 civil suits filed against the regulation, with over 200 
	plaintiffs. [Becket 
	Fund, HHS Information Central]. The Archdiocese of New York is among the plaintiffs in the lawsuits.  However, the Archdiocese  
	has, for years, been indirectly paying for health insurance for employees of 
	the Catholic Health Care System that includes coverage for contraception and 
	abortion. 
	[New 
	York Times]
	A North Carolina bill that proposes to modify laws 
	pertaining to abortion health insurance coverage includes a
	
	protection of conscience provision for health care workers and health 
	care institutions.  In Vermont, a new assisted suicide 
	law allows for
	
	protection of conscience for health care workers and somewhat more 
	limited protection for health care  facilities.
	
			
			2.  News Items
			
				You can search news items by date, country and topic in the
				Project News/Blog. 
			
			3.  Recent Postings
			
				
				
				Personal Opinions and Ideology, Not "Science".  From
				Conscience and its Enemies: Confronting the Dogmas of 
				Liberal Secularism, by Robert P. George
				A 
				"medical misadventure" in Ireland: Deaths of Savita & Prasa 
				Halappanavar.  University Hospital, Galway, 
				Ireland (21-28 October, 2012)
				Protection of 
				Life During Pregnancy Act 2013 (Ireland) (Extracts 
				pertaining to freedom of conscience)
				Draft Irish Abortion Law: Protection of Conscience- 				
				Testimony before the Joint Committee on Health and Children 
				Houses of the Oireachtas (Tithe an Oireachtais) Dublin, 
				Ireland 17-21 May, 2013
				Draft Heads of Bill for Irish abortion law:
				
				Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill 2013 (Extracts 
				pertaining to freedom of conscience)
				
				
				What Role does Conscience play in Medical Ethics? 
				Presentation to the Association of Catholic Doctors,
				Dublin, 27 September, 2008.
				
				
				
				Redefining the practice of medicine: Winks and nods and 
				euthanasia in Quebec.  Commentary on Bill 52: An 
				Act respecting end-of-life care (June, 2013) 
				U.S. Senate,
				Bill S1204 
				(2013) Health Care Conscience Rights Act
				North Carolina, USA:
				House 
				Bill 730 (2013) Insurance & 
				Health Care Conscience Protection
				Vermont, USA: 
				Protection of conscience provision in assisted suicide statute
				
				United Kingdom: Assisted Dying Bill (HL Bill 24) 
				(protection of conscience provision)
				
			
			4.  Action Items
			
				None noted.
			
			5.  Conferences/Papers
			The Project will post notices of conferences 
that are explore and support the principle freedom of conscience, including the 
legitimate role of moral or religious conviction in shaping law and public 
policy in pluralist states or societies.
			
				
				 
				
			
			6.  Publications of Interest
			
	
		O'Rourke A, De Crespigny L, Pyman A. 
		Abortion and Conscientious Objection: The New Battleground.
		 Abstract: 
	This paper examines the vexed issue of conscientious objection and abortion. 
		. .We argue that 
	the unregulated use of conscientious objection impedes women's rights to 
	access safe lawful medical procedures. As such, we contend that a 
	physician's withdrawal from patient care on the basis of conscience must be 
	limited to certain circumstances. . .the 'obligation to refer' in ALRA is 
		consistent with international practice and laws in other jurisdictions. 
		. .
		Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians in 
		Europe:
		
		Legal Restrictions Affecting Christians / Report 2012
	 
				Murphy S, Genuis SJ, "Freedom 
				of Conscience in Health Care: Distinctions and Limits." 
				Journal of Bioethical Enquiry, June, 2013
				Fernandez-Lynch H, "Discrimination 
				at the doctor's office." 
				N Engl J Med 2013; 
				368:1668-1670 
				May 2, 2013DOI: 
				10.1056/NEJMp1211375
				 
			
			7.  Video
			
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