|
Abortion Activists’ ‘Plan B’
Catholics Fear a National Campaign Targeting Church Hospitals
BY TOM MCFEELY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR November 4-10, 2007 Issue |
Posted 10/30/07 at 8:52 AM
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvania is the latest battleground in
a national campaign by abortion activists directed at Catholic hospitals. The
goal? To persuade state legislatures to force Catholic hospitals to dispense
the contraceptive known as Plan B.
Catholic bioethics experts suggest the abortion lobby and
its allies have an underlying agenda: The drug’s pro-abortion promoters hope to
eradicate the religious freedom rights of Catholics to set their own policies
at Catholic medical institutions.
According to Dan O’Brien, vice president of ethics for St.
Louis-based Ascension Health, which operates 65 Catholic acute care hospitals,
said that 15 states have now passed legislation regarding hospitals’ provision
of Plan B to rape victims.
Three other states — Pennsylvania, Florida and Wisconsin —
are actively considering proposed bills.
“We are opposed to the bill, unless it is amended with
appropriate conscience-exception language,” Amy Beisel, director of
communications for the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, said about the
proposed legislation in her state.
Plan B delivers a high dose of the same hormones used in
oral contraceptives. The drug, whose primary effect is to prevent ovulation, is
designed to be administered as an emergency contraceptive up to 72 hours after
sexual intercourse.
But according to some scientific research, the drug may
cause an abortion if dispensed to a woman who has already conceived but whose
new child has not yet implanted in the womb.
Because of that danger, some Catholic hospitals have set up
protocols regarding the use of Plan B, employing ovulation tests to reduce the
possibility of causing an abortion when it is administered as an emergency
contraceptive.
Prominent pro-abortion organizations such as NARAL
Pro-Choice America, Planned Parenthood and the ACLU claim that Plan B has no
abortifacient effect — but they are leading the campaign to force hospitals to
administer it to rape victims without ovulation testing and without conscience
clauses allowing Catholic institutions and medical personnel to refuse to
provide it.
The abortion lobby efforts have succeeded in many states. In
September, Connecticut’s bishops announced a policy of “reluctant compliance”
with a new state law requiring hospitals to dispense Plan B to rape victims who
request it, without an ovulation test.
The Connecticut bishops, who had fought unsuccessfully
against the bill’s passage, were criticized by some pro-lifers for stating that
it was not intrinsically immoral for Catholic hospitals and medical personnel
to comply with the legislation.
John Haas, president of the Philadelphia-based National
Catholic Bioethics Center, said the debate over the merits of the bishops’
statement has diverted attention from the fact that abortion activists again
succeeded in utilizing Plan B legislation to undermine the autonomy of Catholic
medical institutions.
“This is part of a concerted national action against the
Church,” said Haas. “This is coming up in one legislature after another after
another.”
Coordinated Campaign
In December 2004, the ACLU’s national office published a
“Reproductive Freedom Briefing Paper” outlining the strategy and tactics the
abortion movement is employing in its Plan B campaign.
The ACLU paper was produced in consultation with Catholics
for a Free Choice, an abortion lobby group that has been denounced by the U.S.
bishops’ conference for falsely claiming to be an authentically Catholic
organization. NARAL, Planned Parenthood and several other prominent
pro-abortion groups also were involved in producing the ACLU paper.
NARAL’s website monitors bills to mandate access to Plan B
for rape victims as part of its state-by-state tracking of pending “pro-choice”
legislation. NARAL also devotes a section of its website to promoting a federal
bill that would deny federal funds to hospitals that don’t provide mandatory
Plan B access to rape victims.
NARAL affiliates have lobbied aggressively in Connecticut
and other states where Plan B legislation has been debated, as have Planned
Parenthood affiliates. In Connecticut, the pro-abortion lobbyists cited a
hard-line Plan B bill passed earlier in neighboring Massachusetts as a precedent
that should direct Connecticut legislators to reject provisions that would
protect Catholics against possible participation in abortions.
“In 2005, Massachusetts … mandated that emergency rooms
provide information about emergency contraception (EC) to all sexual assault
survivors and EC itself upon request,” Colin Moore, an official with the
Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts, said in testimony last March to a
Connecticut legislative committee. “Planned Parenthood, along with other advocacy
groups, worked hard to defeat attempts to weaken the bill, which included,
among other things, proposed refusal clauses and referrals to other hospitals.”
Added Moore, “We are proud that the law as passed contained
none of these delays. Provision of EC to sexual assault survivors proved to be
a clear example of ‘common ground’ which legislators from across the choice
spectrum could agree.”
Pennsylvania Catholic Conference spokeswoman Beisel
acknowledged that events in other states were influencing the debate in
Pennsylvania, as well.
Said Beisel, “The proponents have looked at what was done in
many other states, and they have been discussing what’s been done in other
states, and they’ve looked at what’s going on in Connecticut.”
‘Invasive Control’
Tom Davis is an attorney in Connecticut and a deacon in the
Melkite Greek-Catholic Church who has closely monitored the Plan B issue. He
said a sophisticated “abortion access project” is moving across the nation
targeting jurisdictions where Plan B legislation can be passed, thereby
undermining the right of Catholic medical institutions to set their own
policies.
Earlier this year in Colorado, a state where pro-abortion
groups judged they could not win support for a harsh law like those passed in
Connecticut and Massachusetts, the abortion activists instead lobbied
successfully for a Plan B law that requires hospitals to simply inform rape
victims that the medication exists.
“The proponents of Plan B, and the proponents of abortion
access, are very clever, very well financed, and plan very well,” said Deacon
Davis, who appeared before the Connecticut legislative committee to argue
against its Plan B bill.
As abortion activists continue to make incremental gains in
their Plan B campaign, Deacon Davis said “it opens up the specter of more
invasive control” over Catholic hospitals. He speculated the next step could be
a campaign requiring hospital emergency rooms to provide rape victims with the
RU-486 abortion drug, to be used if Plan B fails to prevent pregnancy.
Deacon Davis said that a key lesson to be learned from
Connecticut is that it’s crucial for lay Catholics to mobilize in support of
their bishops to prevent passage of problematic legislation. Catholics in
states like Pennsylvania must learn about the scientific uncertainty regarding
Plan B’s possible abortifacient effect, show up at legislative hearings to
argue the Catholic case against mandating automatic provision of the drug, and
communicate to their elected representatives that it’s not acceptable to vote
for anti-Catholic bills, he said.
“We need them at those hearings, and they’ve got to be
informed,” Deacon Davis said. “It’s not particularly easy to do, but it’s
within the capability of anyone with a high school education to learn those
issues, to learn them well and be vocal about them.”
Tom McFeely is based in
Victoria, British Columbia.
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|