Should Drs. be allowed to refuse treatment because of their personal religious beliefs?
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Yes, I think so.
Should there be laws concerning what they can or can't refuse? (IE: they could refuse to do abortions, but can't refuse to prescribe birth control)
I don't agree w/the Catholic Church concept that birth control is a sin or whatever they think it is, but I don't think a Catholic doctor should be forced to prescribe it. I'm not sure they could write a law specific enough to cover things for which they could or could not refuse. Even if it was something like the woman's life is at stake unless whatever, each situation would have it's own details and judgement calls would differ.
My old gyno's office used to be in a Catholic Hospital. I had a fibroid but she wrongly diagnosed it and prescribed a Depo-Provera shot in hopes it would stop the bleeding. I took the script downstairs to the pharmacy and they asked if it was for birth control. I was just thinking in general terms about it what that shot is mainly used for and said Yes. They then said they couldn't fill the script there. No biggie, I went to a diff. pharmacy.
That article looks a little biased against "religious beliefs" in my opinion.
For instance, look at the writing here:
"Boyer stared in disbelief. No? She tried vainly to hold back tears as she reasoned with the doctor: She was midcycle, putting her in danger of getting pregnant. Emergency contraception is most effective within a short time frame, ideally 72 hours.
If he wasn't willing to write an EC prescription, she'd be glad to see a different doctor. Dr. Gish simply shook his head. "It's against my religion," he said, according to Boyer. (When contacted, the doctor declined to comment for this article.)"
Why didn't she see another doctor? Is she saying he said it was against Dr. Gish's religion for her to see another doctor?
And this (attention to the bold) is not exclusive to female health care:
"In many cases, women don't even know a doctor is withholding treatment. Boyer and Harnish, for example, wouldn't have realized they'd been denied care if they'd been among the estimated one in three women who don't know about EC. In the New England Journal of Medicine survey, 8 percent of physicians said they felt no obligation to present all options to their patients.
"When you see a doctor, you presume you're getting all the information you need to make a decision," notes Jill Morrison, senior counsel for health and ...."
But I've read "SELF Magazine" several years ago and my interpreted skewing on their part does not surprise me.
