Posted on 01/18/2018 4:21:58 PM PST by Gamecock
Donald Trump once described himself as pro-choice in every respect. On Thursday, his administration announced a new office to protect doctors and nurses who object to providing abortion services and other medical care on moral and religious grounds.
Acting HHS Secretary Eric Hargan announced the new Conscience and Religious Freedom office, housed in the agencys Civil Rights division, saying Trump had promised his administration would vigorously uphold the rights of conscience and religious freedom. That promise is being kept today.
Its a major victory for the pro-life movement, especially given Trumps past comments about his support for abortion. Trump is also planning to speak to March for Life attendees in Washington Friday, the first president ever to do so.
Critics, meanwhile, fear that moral objections described by the administration are murky and could become a catchall for all kinds of services, putting vulnerable populations at risk.
The move reverses Obama-era health care rules that barred health care workers from refusing to treat transgender patients or people who had sought or were seeking abortions. It is one of a few Obama administration health care policies Trump has targeted, including one that significantly loosened the requirement that employers offer health insurance that covers contraception.
Obama himself revised Bush II-era moral and religious objector rules that were seen as too limiting for patients. The Trump administrations move is a shift back to those earlier conscientious objector protections.
Protections already exist in some form for health care providers who object to certain treatments or procedures on religious or moral grounds, so this new office is likely designed to make enforcement of those protections more robust.
It will do this by investigating complaints from those who feel coerced to participate in certain procedures. According to HHS, people can file complaints if objected to, participated in, or refused to participate in specific medical procedures, including abortion and sterilization, and related training and research activities. It also covers assisted suicide.
HHS Office for Civil Rights Director Roger Severino told the Washington Post the division would also investigate new and existing claims, but potentially engage in public education and policy making though he didnt include specifics.
We also know that itll have some teeth. According to Politico, this new division will be on equal footing with the two already existing in the office that deal with federal civil rights laws and the privacy and other issues that relate to HIPPA.
Critics fear discrimination based on gender and sexual orientation The new rules most clearly protect health-care workers who decline to provide abortion services. Critics say they could also lead to discrimination for lesbian, gay, and transgender patients. Reproductive-rights advocates also fear womens treatment might be compromised because they sought or are seeking abortions or contraception.
For example, a case in Michigan got national attention in 2015 when a pediatrician refused to treat an infant because his parents were lesbians.
This probably wont be a huge issue in large facilities or areas with many health-care options, but for those who live in underserved or rural areas, critics say it could jeopardize patients health.
Trumps making good on his promises to the religious right During the 2016 campaign, some conservatives were nervous about Trumps bon-a-fides on reproductive rights. But Trumps made good on promises to the religious right since taking office.
Under President Obama, the federal government failed to enforce federal laws in place to ensure hard working Americans arent unfairly punished by the government for simply seeking to live their lives according to their beliefs, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins said in a statement, adding that Americans should not be forced to choose between their faith and their desire to help patients.
The HHS office of Civil Rights director Roger Severino said, the current laws protecting religious freedom are just empty words on paper if theyre not enforced. No one should be forced to choose between helping sick people and living by ones deepest moral or religious convictions, he said in a statement, and the new division will help guarantee that victims of unlawful discrimination find justice.
Ping
Trump-volution.
A surprisingly fair headline. Considering this comes from a hard left site.
Good. It’s the right time for this.
This is great and should have been done during the last administration.
Leftists want to force people to perform their holy grail abortion no matter the cost..doctors and nurses who believe that abortion is cold blooded MURDER should NOT be forced to perform them
long overdue -
Excellent news. :D
Ive met Roger Severino . Great guy.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.