‘This is moral genocide’: Canadian doctors blast plans to force them into helping patients procure abortion

LifeSite News

Steve Weatherbe

REGINA, Saskatchewan, February 17, 2015 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Christian doctors across Canada are vowing to challenge the constitutionality of the requirement now being considered by the Saskatchewan medical profession that all its members be required to perform abortions or assist at suicides—or refer patients to other doctors who will.

“This is moral genocide,” Saskatoon emergency room doctor Philip Fitzpatrick says of the policy, already approved in principle without consultation with doctors or the public by the Saskatchewan College of Physicians and Surgeons.

“There’s no medical reason for these clauses overriding our consciences,” he continued. “The people who want euthanasia and abortion on demand just don’t like the fact somebody disagrees. They are trying to chase us out of the profession.”

“We have to sue the College if it approves this policy,” Larry Worthen, executive director of the Christian Dental and Medical Association of Canada, told LifeSiteNews. “Half our members will have to quit if it were enforced. It goes against their very reason for being in medicine.” . . .[Full Text]

Moral Reflections on Vaccines Prepared from Cells Derived from Aborted Human Foetuses

Pontifical Academy for Life; Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith

PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA PRO VITA

Il Presidente
Prot.n.P/3431

Vatican City,
June 9 2005

Mrs Debra L.Vinnedge
Executive Director, Children of God for Life
943 Deville Drive East
Largo, Florida
33771
Stati Uniti

Dear Mrs Debra L.Vinnedge,

On June 4, 2003, you wrote to His Eminence Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, with a copy of this letter forwarded to me, asking to the Sacred Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith a clarification about the liceity of vaccinating children with vaccines prepared using cell lines derived from aborted human fetuses.  Your question regarded in particular the right of the parents of these children to oppose such a vaccination when made at school, mandated by law. As there were no formal guidelines by the magisterium concerning that topic, you said that catholic parents were often challenged by State Courts, Health Officials and School Administrators when they filled religious exemptions for their children to this type of vaccination

This Pontifical Academy for Life, carrying out the commission entrusted to us by the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, in answer to your request, has proceeded to a careful examination of the question of these “tainted” vaccines, and has produced as a result a study (in Italian) that has been realized with the help of a group of experts. This study has been approved as such by the Congregation and we send you, there enclosed, an English translation of a synthesis of this study. This synthesis can be brought to the knowledge of the interested officials and organisms.

A documented paper on the topic will be published in the journal “Medicina e Morale”, edited by the Centra di Bioetica della Universita Cattolica in Rome.

The study, its synthesis, and the translation of this material took some time. We apologize for the delay.

With my best regards,

Sincerely yours,
+E.Sgreccia

 00193 Roma – Via della Conciliazione, 1 – Tel. 06 698.82423 – 06 698.81693 – Fax 06 698.82014

See Moral Reflections on Vaccines Prepared from Cells Derived from Aborted Human Foetuses 

Saskatchewan doctors could face discipline over assisted suicide

Global News

Doug Lett

SASKATOON – Doctors in the province who refuse to cooperate with physician-assisted suicide could face discipline according to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan.

“If a physician feels the directives are wrong, they will still, we would expect, they will still follow those directives,” said Bryan Salte, associate registrar of the college, “in spite of the fact they may not agree with them.”

While the college has not come up with policies around assisted suicide, it is circulating a draft policy on conscientious refusal. It says while doctors can refuse to provide a legally provided service if it violates their freedom of conscience, they do have to make a referral to another health care provider who will do it.

That means a doctor who believes suicide is wrong would still have to refer a patient to a doctor who would help them kill themselves. . . [Full Text]

 

Submission to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario

Re: Professional Obligations and Human Rights

Christian Medical & Dental Society, Canadian Federation of Catholic Physician Societies

The Christian Medical and Dental Society of Canada (“CMDS”) and the Canadian Federation of Catholic Physician Societies (“CFCPS”) welcome this opportunity to provide feedback to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (“CPSO”) on the draft policy “Professional Obligations and Human Rights”. Together our organizations represent 1800 physicians, all of whom are seriously concerned about the implications of the policy and their ability to continue to practice medicine should the policy be passed.

Freedom of conscience

Freedom of conscience is protected under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. As a creature of provincial statute, the CPSO is bound by the Charter, and must respect it. Yet this draft policy requires physicians to refer for, and in some cases carry out services that are contrary to their conscience. (Lines 156-168)

Conscience rights were recently reasserted by the Supreme Court of Canada in the Carter case. The Court confirmed that “a physician’s decision to participate in assisted dying is a matter of conscience” (para 132). The Court favourably cited the factum of the CMDS and CFCPS who had reproduced the comments of Justice Beetz in Morgentaler (para 132), who stated that a physician could not be compelled to participate in abortion. These comments are directly applicable to the draft policy and we urge the CPSO to revise the draft in light of the Supreme Court’s decision.

The reasoning of the Carter case can also be used to determine whether s.1 of the Charter can be used to limit doctors’ freedom of conscience. The Carter case made clear that in the absence of evidence that patients are being denied a Charter right, the Court will determine that it is not necessary to force physicians to refer patients or perform procedures in violation of the physician’s Charter right to freedom of conscience and religion. It is noteworthy as well, that the Charter does not apply to physicians, but rather, protects them. Under the principles in Carter physicians who object to engaging in certain procedures or pharmaceuticals, including through referrals, will be successful if they can show that there is a regulatory system that ensures access to procedures like abortion and euthanasia without incorporating the conscientiously objecting physician into the process of referral. This test is already met, because in Ontario patients can access abortion through self- referral. There is no reason to insist that a conscientiously objecting physician refer for abortion when the patient already can self refer.

Furthermore, it is not the CPSO’s role to ensure access to abortions. Even if it were, there would be an onus on the CPSO to prove that it cannot ensure access to abortions without infringing on the Charter rights of individual physicians (para. 118). A theoretical or speculative fear cannot justify an infringement (para. 119).

There is no human right in Canada to demand and receive particular services from a specific physician. Provincial human rights legislation prohibits discrimination against the public on a number of grounds that include among others, race, ethnicity, sex, religion, sexual orientation, age or disability. Human rights legislation does not dictate what services must be delivered. So, if a restaurant chooses not to serve pork because of the owner’s religious beliefs, there is no violation. If the restaurant chooses to exclude people of a particular ethnic group, however, that would amount to discrimination and a violation of provincial human rights legislation. In the same way, a physician who is unable to participate in a procedure or prescribe a pharmaceutical product for moral or religious reasons is not discriminating against his or her patient provided all patients are treated the same. Unfortunately, this draft policy suggests that a physician’s objection to a specific procedure or pharmaceutical may be a violation of a patient’s rights under the Charter or the Code. This reference makes clear that those who prepared this policy misunderstand the application and function of Ontario and Canadian law.

Provided the services are delivered in a respectful way, there are no competing rights. In such a case, the only human rights present are the physician’s human rights to freedom of religion and freedom of conscience. Furthermore, when the physician is an employee they have the additional right to be accommodated by their employer. [Full text]

Groups make effort to protect physicians’ conscience rights

 The Catholic Register

Deborah Gyapong, Canadian Catholic News

OTTAWA – Doctors’ conscience rights are threatened by a proposed policy of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) that may force them to refer patients for morally problematic procedures, warn some physicians’ organizations.

The CPSO has given a Feb. 20 deadline for input into the policy that would force physicians to refer patients for procedures such as abortion and assisted suicide (the Supreme Court on Feb. 6 struck down prohibitions against assisted suicide) against their consciences. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan is also considering similar changes to its policy, with a deadline of March 6 for public input.

The Christian Medical and Dental Society (CMDS) Canada has been working closely with the Canadian Federation of Catholic Physicians’ Societies in rallying opposition to the proposed changes.

“The proposed policy demands that doctors refer for, and in some cases actually perform, procedures like birth control, abortion and even euthanasia,” said CMDS executive director Larry Worthen. “Physicians would have to perform these procedures when the regulator considers them to be ‘urgent or otherwise necessary to prevent imminent harm, suffering and/or deterioration.’  . . . [Full Text]