Christian Medical Association's Presentation to President's Council on 
	Bioethics
	Christian Medical and Dental Associations 
	(USA)
	
	Session 7: Public Comments 
	Friday, November 9, 2007
	Reproduced with permission
    
				
				
	
	CHAIRMAN PELLEGRINO: We're at that portion which is the 
	public part of the meeting. We have two people who have signed up to 
	comment, and I would like to ask if there are others who have not signed up, 
	the first opportunity for comment would be to Cynthia Merrill and Jonathan 
	Imbody.
	Now, as they get up to the microphone, let me say that we have limited 
	time for public commentary. So as always, brevity and clarity and raising 
	the question as concisely as possible is the best way to advance whatever it 
	is you want to say before the Council. Sometimes people use the commentary 
	to make another speech, but we've heard a lot of speeches today. . . 
	MR. IMBODY: Thank you, Dr. Pellegrino. I appreciate it very much 
	the discussion and excellent points made yesterday on the issue of 
	conscience, which I'd also like to address and have a practical application.
	
	The way things are going, some would actually force out of the profession 
	those physicians who have moral objections to procedures like abortion, and 
	that loss of physicians, especially obstetricians and gynecologists who, as 
	you know, are already leaving a practice because of malpractice insurance 
	costs, would have a severe impact on the delivery of healthcare. 
	The committee on ethics of the American College of Obstetricians and 
	Gynecologists, known as ACOG, an organization that is officially and 
	politically pro-choice or pro-abortion, depending on which term you prefer, 
	has just issued a paper laying down the rules for when and how and why 
	pro-life physicians may or may not exercise the rights of conscience and 
	mostly about how they may not exercise the rights of conscience. And a few 
	excerpts from this paper illustrate what I see as a war that's being waged 
	against conscience rights, and, also, how far apart are the world views of 
	those who do have conscientious objections to abortion and those who do not?
	ACOG says in its position paper, for example, that physicians may not 
	exercise the right of conscience if that might "constitute an imposition of 
	religious or moral beliefs on patients." Well, that would seem to mean that 
	any physician who has religiously-based objections to procedure or 
	prescription would be forced to ignore his or her conscience and simply 
	fulfill the patient's demand like a vending machine. 
	The ACOG paper also says, "All healthcare providers must provide accurate 
	and unbiased information so that patients can make informed decisions." 
	Well, that sounds great until you realize that ACOG will only apply this 
	rule to make pro-life doctors offer abortion as an option. ACOG has actually 
	gone to court to fight laws requiring abortion doctors to offer informed 
	consent information to patients on the risks and alternatives to abortion.1
	ACOG also says, "Physicians have the duty to refer patients in a timely 
	manner to other providers if they do not feel they can, in conscience, 
	provide the standard reproductive service that patients request." So 
	according to ACOG, physicians who see abortion as killing a developing baby 
	have a duty to refer patients to a doctor who will do the deed.
	And, finally, ACOG suggests that "Providers with moral or religious 
	objections should practice in proximity to individuals who do not share 
	their views." So ACOG rules would actually require a pro-life physician to 
	relocate his or her practice to be close to an abortion facility. And 
	besides the fact that this drastic requirement would only be imposed on 
	pro-life doctors, it would also have the practical impact of removing 
	desperately needed doctors from underserved areas. 
	These statements from ACOG would seem to illustrate why the issue of the 
	conscience rights of those who provide healthcare should not and cannot be 
	separated from the issue of healthcare delivery. Thank you. 
	Notes
	
1. American College of Obstetricians 
	v. Thornburgh, 737 F.2d 283, 297-98 (3d Cir.1984).