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Reproductive Justice and Gender

The Medical Right Wants to Deny You Health Care

By Cynthia L. Cooper and Marjorie Signer, The Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice. Posted June 9, 2008.


Christian medical groups have started a major campaign to demand that physicians be permitted to refuse medical care to patients.
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This article was originally published on the website of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice. You can read more about the right-wing assault on medicine here.

The Christian Medical and Dental Associations (CMDA) is pressing a major campaign to demand that physicians be permitted to refuse medical care to patients. The organization has made this campaign a centerpiece of its activities.

In the past three months, the organization has launched a fundraising drive on the rights of Christian doctors to refuse to provide services, a special edition newsletter, a website collection of resources and documents, a survey of members, a letter-writing campaign , and requests for prayers.

Dr. David L. Stevens, the organization's CEO, said on April 17, 2008, that CMDA is making physician refusals a top priority, based on its Biblical beliefs. The issue, said Stevens, is "a battle to determine the very future of Christians in healthcare."

CMDA is a behemoth among the medical groups aligned with the Religious Right, which the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC) terms the "Medical Right." With an annual budget in excess of $11 million, CMDA operates an extensive complex in Bristol, Tennessee, and maintains an office in the Washington D.C. area. The organization claims to have 15,000 members, although not all are doctors. Its mission is to equip physicians to glorify God, influence patients towards "a right relationship with Jesus Christ," and advance "Biblical principles" in healthcare.


The organization has been particularly incensed by a November 2007 report from the Ethics Committee of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). The ACOG report acknowledges that some doctors may ethically decline to provide abortions based on their beliefs or conscience but states that doctors are responsible for referring their patients to a provider who will perform the services.

CMDA opposes abortion and insists that referring patients for abortions is no different from performing them. "Though our members would comply with a request for transfer of a patient's medical record to another licensed medical practitioner, to refer a patient for an abortion involves moral complicity in the death of a human being," Stevens wrote in a letter to ACOG on April 9.

The April 17 CMDA "News & Views" newsletter notes that ACOG may "redo" the ethics opinion. But Gene Rudd, senior vice president of CMDA, said that the only acceptable ACOG response is a complete retraction.

"There is no way they can satisfy many people, including myself, if they want to compromise conscience," Rudd said.

In a press release, Rudd said he resigned from ACOG after the ethics opinion was released.

Using catastrophic language and heightened demands, Stevens sent a fundraising letter to CMDA members, declaring: "A dangerous new attack has been launched on our right to practice medicine according to conscience." He said: struggle for our 'right of conscience' is raging all around us -- and if we lose it, we may be denied admittance to training schools or even forced out of practice!" (as printed) Later, he adds, "Hyperbole? I wish it were."

CMDA said it intends to litigate, even to the Supreme Court, and to be "the ones framing the issues rather than those who seek to silence us."


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Christianity????
Posted by: andrushka on Jun 9, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I naively thought that Christianity was about helping others in distress. Obviously the Christian Coalition is anything but Christian. Those people are sick, they should seek psychiatric help urgently.

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» Nuts hijack of Christianity Posted by: carbon-based
One good turn deserves another
Posted by: LMNOP on Jun 9, 2008 11:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a physician, and I have moral convictions too. For example, I consider this type of Christian thinking dangerous to America, and it is my belief that it should be stamped out before it catches on and anyone is harmed by it. I'd like to help these people to know that that knife cuts both ways.

In short, I want permission to refuse to treat dying Christians in my emergency room. It goes against my conscience to help them to go home and continue working to deny others the reproductive autonomy that, according to my beliefs, they deserve.

Just a philosophical difference, you might say, but if that is enough for Christians, it is enough for me when dealing with Christians, and apparently, if you go by the Christians themselves, it is enough for them.

Did I mention that I also want the right to refuse to refer them for help, too? It would go against my conscience to be complicit in helping any doctor help them. I'd like to just wheel them off out of my way to some closet and leave them there.

I would be doing this as an act of love in the hopes that they would see the error of their ways, repent, and return to a state of decency that doesn't permit one to indulge one's conscience selectively against any legal activity. After a little of this kind of love, they might begin to see the error of their ways. And wouldn't that be glorious! Hallelujah!

America seems to get more sickening each week. I wonder if Christians understand how loathsome and detestable they are becoming to the rest of us - both the kind that advocate this kind of crap and the kind that don't denounce it.

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Christians who don't follow Christ are something else.
Posted by: luzmejor on Jun 14, 2008 4:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, nobody gets to call himself a Christian while expressing the attitude of a murderous dictator against a group that is the target of haters in right-wing religions, namely, women and children. We all know already how Christ lived his life. He didn't brutalize anyone, and certainly nobody weaker than himself.

Medical ethics also has nothing to do with that kind of fascism. It is an organization of physicians who are professionals interested in doing the best job they can in health care for all the patients they treat.

Anti-abortion activism is always carried out by an organization of people who hate women and fear their own deaths. Part of their fear of death is a fear of never being born. This leads directly to the idea that women should be forced to bear unwanted children. Of course, that is psychotic in the extreme.

Organizations that threaten doctors, like these fake christian groups do, should be challenged in court to prove everything they say. They cannot do it. That's why they pay crooked politicians and judges to help them use the law to batter the wives, sisters and daughters of everyone else.

We know their "works" and judge them as the frauds they are.

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