Right of Medical Conscience to Go to Court
In Louisiana, a nurse who was demoted for refusing to participate in dispensing the morning after pill due to religious objections, has won the right from the state supreme court to sue her former employer for religious discrimination. From the story:
The Louisiana Supreme Court has declined to hear a hospital's appeal in a case brought by a nurse who claims she was demoted after she refused to dispense the "morning-after" pill. A state judge refused in 2007 to throw out Toni Lemly's lawsuit against St. Tammany Parish Hospital. The hospital appealed, but the Supreme Court declined Friday to review the judge's ruling.I think the key to this case is that the hospital changed Lemly's job description from working in wellness--which is consistent with a pro life religious belief--to forcing her into a position for which she had never signed on, thereby requiring her to choose between her beliefs and her work.
The hospital hired Lemly in 2003 to work in its Community Wellness Center. Several months later, the hospital contracted with the state to provide counseling to patients about emergency contraception. The hospital offered Lemly a part-time position after she objected to distributing the morning-after pill, but she turned down the offer and sued, alleging religious discrimination. A lawyer for Lemly says the Supreme Court's decision clears the way for a trial.
This occurred back in 2005 before the Bush conscience clause was in effect. Today, this nurse would be protected. Tomorrow, when and if Obama actually revokes the Bush policy, who knows?
If we are going to live in a morally and culturally polyglot society, people like Lemly will have to be reasonably accommodated. Otherwise, many good medical professionals will be driven out of medicine--as some have already called for--and many institutions may close. Surely, we can all just get along?


4 Comments:
I hope she wins her case. The usual arguments will abound - what's next, a heart surgeon refusing to perform heart surgery? - ignoring the plain fact that heart surgery does not involve any kind of violation of conscience.
Bush's conscience regulations were mechanisms to make sure existing laws were enforced. Those laws won't disappear if the Obama administration rescinds the conscience regs. They'll have to rescind the laws. You can bet they are working on that.
I'm sure the regs were promulgated because all over the country, county health departments etc. are refusing to hire people who "aren't comfortable with" referring for abortions. Bush's regulations would have put those bureaucrats (and their potential hires) on notice that they couldn't do this anymore. The laws will still be there, but no one will notice, and they won't be enforced if the regulations are rescinded. What has been going on since Roe will continue, or get worse if the laws are rescinded.
I teach a medical model of natural family planning. My conscience and professional ethics won't allow me to even refer for contraception. Do you think that I would ever be hired by a county health department to provide such a service? Fat chance. Fat chance that I would ever get a government grant to teach poor people (who have been the ones most victimized by the degradation of the culture).
Who's behind all this? Free will and our chosing wrong. Our ancestors in the garden chose to believe the lie that violating the Creator's rules would actually make them god-like. You think those embryo-murdering IVF and ESCR researchers might have a bit of a God-complex? Duh. Our dear Fuhrers, Margaret Sanger and Alfred Kinsey were in bed with the Rockefellers etc. There is probably a cabal going on - with a goal of dumbing down the public (which isn't so hard once they jettison a belief in objective truth and Higher Authority) so they will think they are being open-minded or enlightened when they violate human rights and nature. You don't have to be a conspiracy-nut to acknowledge that we are being manipulated into a one-world economic system right now.
Right -- diversity is desireable, only depending on which aspects of it...
A doctor I know would like to be hired in a hospital ER. He has a bona fide MD degree, is a practicing Native American shaman, and believes he can stop bleeding by burning sagebrush and shaking a rattle over a trauma victim. This his his sincerely-held religious belief. He's having trouble getting a job. I think the Bush Administration's conscience law should protect him, don't you?
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