C. Fiala, K. Gemzell Danielsson, O. Heikinheimo, Jens A Guðmundsson, Joyce H Arthur
{"title":"Yes we can! Successful examples of disallowing ‘conscientious objection’ in reproductive health care","authors":"C. Fiala, K. Gemzell Danielsson, O. Heikinheimo, Jens A Guðmundsson, Joyce H Arthur","doi":"10.3109/13625187.2016.1138458","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Reproductive health care is the only field in medicine where health care professionals (HCPs) are allowed to limit a patient’s access to a legal medical treatment – usually abortion or contraception – by citing their ‘freedom of conscience.’ However, the authors’ position is that ‘conscientious objection’ (‘CO’) in reproductive health care should be called dishonourable disobedience because it violates medical ethics and the right to lawful health care, and should therefore be disallowed. Three countries – Sweden, Finland, and Iceland – do not generally permit HCPs in the public health care system to refuse to perform a legal medical service for reasons of ‘CO’ when the service is part of their professional duties. The purpose of investigating the laws and experiences of these countries was to show that disallowing ‘CO’ is workable and beneficial. It facilitates good access to reproductive health services because it reduces barriers and delays. Other benefits include the prioritisation of evidence-based medicine, rational arguments, and democratic laws over faith-based refusals. Most notably, disallowing ‘CO’ protects women’s basic human rights, avoiding both discrimination and harms to health. Finally, holding HCPs accountable for their professional obligations to patients does not result in negative impacts. Almost all HCPs and medical students in Sweden, Finland, and Iceland who object to abortion or contraception are able to find work in another field of medicine. The key to successfully disallowing ‘CO’ is a country’s strong prior acceptance of women’s civil rights, including their right to health care.","PeriodicalId":22423,"journal":{"name":"The European Journal of Contraception & Reproductive Health Care","volume":"4 1","pages":"201 - 206"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-02-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"33","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The European Journal of Contraception & Reproductive Health Care","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3109/13625187.2016.1138458","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 33
Abstract
Abstract Reproductive health care is the only field in medicine where health care professionals (HCPs) are allowed to limit a patient’s access to a legal medical treatment – usually abortion or contraception – by citing their ‘freedom of conscience.’ However, the authors’ position is that ‘conscientious objection’ (‘CO’) in reproductive health care should be called dishonourable disobedience because it violates medical ethics and the right to lawful health care, and should therefore be disallowed. Three countries – Sweden, Finland, and Iceland – do not generally permit HCPs in the public health care system to refuse to perform a legal medical service for reasons of ‘CO’ when the service is part of their professional duties. The purpose of investigating the laws and experiences of these countries was to show that disallowing ‘CO’ is workable and beneficial. It facilitates good access to reproductive health services because it reduces barriers and delays. Other benefits include the prioritisation of evidence-based medicine, rational arguments, and democratic laws over faith-based refusals. Most notably, disallowing ‘CO’ protects women’s basic human rights, avoiding both discrimination and harms to health. Finally, holding HCPs accountable for their professional obligations to patients does not result in negative impacts. Almost all HCPs and medical students in Sweden, Finland, and Iceland who object to abortion or contraception are able to find work in another field of medicine. The key to successfully disallowing ‘CO’ is a country’s strong prior acceptance of women’s civil rights, including their right to health care.
生殖保健是医学中唯一允许卫生保健专业人员(HCPs)以其“良心自由”为由限制患者获得合法医疗(通常是堕胎或避孕)的领域。"然而,提交人的立场是,生殖保健中的'良心拒服兵役' (' CO ')应被称为不光彩的不服从,因为它违反了医学道德和获得合法保健的权利,因此不应被允许。瑞典、芬兰和冰岛这三个国家通常不允许公共卫生保健系统中的医务人员以“CO”为由拒绝提供合法的医疗服务,如果该服务是其专业职责的一部分。调查这些国家的法律和经验的目的是为了表明禁止“CO”是可行的和有益的。它有助于获得良好的生殖健康服务,因为它减少了障碍和延误。其他好处包括优先考虑循证医学、理性论证和民主法律,而不是基于信仰的拒绝。最值得注意的是,禁止“性行为”保护了妇女的基本人权,避免了歧视和对健康的损害。最后,让医护人员对他们对患者的专业义务负责并不会产生负面影响。在瑞典、芬兰和冰岛,几乎所有反对堕胎或避孕的医护人员和医科学生都能在其他医学领域找到工作。成功禁止“CO”的关键是一个国家事先强烈接受妇女的公民权利,包括她们的医疗保健权。