Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Conscience Clauses: The Flip Side of Medical Futility

"Conscience Clause" laws that would permit pharmacists to refuse to fill birth control pill prescriptions or doctors to perform abortions, are growing in political prominence. By way of push back, some states are passing laws requiring pharmacists to dispense birth control pills, and New York City requires all doctors training in city hospitals in the specialty of Ob/Gyn to perform abortions during their medical training.

Now, a Montana pharmacist, whose state laws are silent about such matters, has decided to quit dispensing birth control pills. From the story:

Pharmacist John Lane believes he has a responsibility to serve humankind through his profession.

Lane, who converted to Catholicism 10 years ago, also believes the "humankind" he pledged to protect includes fertilized eggs that, because of oral contraceptives, are not able to implant in a woman's uterus and grow into a baby. There's more to it than that. But faith is clearly a big reason that, come Jan. 1, Lane will no longer dispense birth-control pills to his customers in Powder River County, Mont.

That decision wouldn't have much effect if Lane worked in Rapid City or surrounding towns, where dozens of other pharmacists and pharmacies are available and willing to fill prescriptions for birth control. But in a town of 450 people, Lane's decision will force customers to either get oral contraceptives by mail order or drive 80 miles to the nearest pharmacy...

There is another reason Lane decided to stop dispensing birth control pills. Three states--California, Illinois and New Jersey--require pharmacists to fill prescriptions for oral contraceptives. Other states, including South Dakota, have "conscience clauses" that protect pharmacists who choose not to fill certain prescriptions.

This issue is the flip side of Futile Care Theory, which would permit doctors to refuse wanted life-sustaining treatments based on their consciences and moral values. Proponents of medical futility should think about this when pushing their agenda--as should proponents of conscience clauses.

That being said, I think that a crucial distinction can be made between refusing to provide medical services based on conscience that are not optional--meaning when life is literally at stake--and refusing desired services the withholding of which would not threaten a patient's life. Thus, I don't believe any doctor should be permitted to refuse to terminate an ectopic pregnancy, even though that is technically an abortion. At the same time, I don't believe that any doctor should be forced to help kill a patient via assisted suicide or euthanasia--nor to participate in the act in any way such as by giving a list of referral sources who would kill a patient. However, if a new doctor asked for the medical records, the refusing doctor would have to comply even if he or she knew that the requesting physician was consulted for purposes of assisted suicide.

This is all very controversial and the anger and acrimony is only likely to increase in coming years. But such are the consequences that befall a society that is atomizing and losing common moral values. As this ongoing loss of commonality continues, expect increasing loss of comity in medicine and science.

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4 Comments:

At December 18, 2007 , Blogger Aki_Izayoi said...

Rising cost of health care should be the bogeyman, not utilitarian ethics.

Ideally, we should treat everyone who wants to be treated.

 
At December 18, 2007 , Blogger Laura(southernxyl) said...

The BCP thing is kind of sticky.

Lots of women are on it to control cramps and excessive flow. The extreme end of that spectrum is girls who have clotting disorders, who are put on the Pill before puberty with no off-weeks so that they do not bleed to death. Then there are girls who are not sexually active but whose cramps are severe enough to disrupt their lives every 3 or 4 weeks - missing school and other activities to spend days lying on their beds in pain. The mom of one girl of my acquaintance told me her non-sexually-active daughter was on a neverending period for several months until the gynecologist put her on the Pill. It's a Godsend to those girls. Or migraine sufferers who find that having their hormones regulated modulates their migraines.

So I hope this pharmacist is flexible enough to prescribe the Pill for non-birth-control reasons.

 
At December 19, 2007 , Blogger patricia bainbridge said...

Actually, there are two general categories for resolving an ectopic pregnancy.

One (administration of the drug methotrexate) IS technically an abortion as it directly causes the death of the embryo or fetus. The intent and result of this method is a dead human being albeit a very small one.

But the other methods (surgical—Salpingotomy, Salpingectomy, etc) are NOT abortions. In many instances with the surgical procedures, the embryo or fetus are removed intact and actually live for a few seconds after removal. There may come a time when these tiny humans could be successful implanted in the uterus. The intent is not the death of the tiny human being, but saving the life of the mother. The principle of double effect is at work here.

 
At December 20, 2007 , Blogger T E Fine said...

My best friend is 29, not sexually active at all, and is on the pill because if she's not, then she has her period for 13 days out of the month. Taking the pill for other than birth control reasons isn't a problem. So should this guy have the right to not supply people with birth control just because he doesn't know their situation and he is making his own assumptions? Hmmmmm....

At the same time, it's against my principles to use the pill or to endorse its use as a contraceptive, so I actually can sympathise with his point.

If the guy is genuinely afraid of being responsible for an abortion (which does happen with the pill sometimes), then doesn't he have the right to say, "I believe that an embryo is a person and I don't want to be party to murdering a person?"

It's hair pulling.

 

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