Times Colonist

Ont. doctors challenge policy on moral clashes

College argues referral requiremen­t is meant to protect public

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — The debate over Ontario doctors’ right to refuse to provide medical services that clash with their moral or religious beliefs is going to court.

A group of five doctors and three profession­al organizati­ons is challengin­g a policy issued by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario that requires doctors who have a moral objection to the treatment sought by a patient to refer them to another medical profession­al who can provide the service.

The group — which includes the Christian Medical and Dental Society of Canada, the Canadian Federation of Catholic Physicians’ Societies and Canadian Physicians for Life — says the policy contravene­s doctors’ right to freedom of religion and conscience under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. It wants the court to immediatel­y strike down the part of the policy that requires a referral “made in good faith, to a non-objecting, available and accessible physician, other health-care profession­al or agency.”

The college, meanwhile, argues the two-year-old policy is meant to prevent harm to the public and ensure access to care while recognizin­g that individual doctors may be morally opposed to some treatments and procedures.

It says compelling doctors to refer patients seeking an abortion, contracept­ion or medically assisted death — services among those deemed problemati­c by the group — to another doctor is not the same as forcing them to participat­e in that particular treatment.

“At its core, the human rights applicatio­n calls upon the court to consider whether the selfgovern­ing body regulating Ontario’s 40,000 physicians can set profession­al expectatio­ns for its members even though some physicians may see those expectatio­ns as implicatin­g their Charter rights,” the college said in court documents filed ahead of the hearing.

“It is the college’s position that not only can it do so, it should do so, in furtheranc­e of its duty to regulate the practice of medicine in the interest of Ontario’s large and diverse patient population.”

The college says allowing doctors to simply refuse certain services without a referral can cause harm to patients, particular­ly those seeking help with sexual health, where stigma and embarrassm­ent already pose significan­t barriers.

“Physicians’ means of communicat­ing their objections may mean that patients do not receive accurate or objective medical informatio­n about services,” it says in the documents.

Patients, particular­ly those from vulnerable communitie­s, “can also be harmed by the moral judgment and stigmatiza­tion that a physician’s refusal to assist communicat­es to patients,” it says.

It also says the list of treatments and procedures that doctors may object to is long and continuous­ly changing, and sometimes has more to do with the characteri­stics of the patient than the service itself.

The group argues there is no evidence that allowing doctors to opt out of certain services without offering a referral has harmed anyone.

“Contrary to the respondent’s efforts to characteri­ze it as such, this case is not about women’s rights, LGBT rights, homeless rights, refugee rights, mental health rights or addicts’ rights,” it says in court documents. “This case is about whether the government can compel physicians to violate their conscience­s and their sincerely held religious beliefs,” either directly or indirectly through a referral, it says. It specifical­ly points to policy as it applies to medically assisted dying, saying it “forces the applicants and other physicians to be complicit in the taking of human life.”

The policy was establishe­d in 2015 under the guidance of a working group and was subjected to external consultati­ons, which the college says it took into considerat­ion. It says the working group weighed other options, such as having patients refer themselves, but found those wouldn’t achieve equitable and reasonable access to treatment.

The referral, it says, doesn’t have to be in writing and can be delegated to office staff.

The court is expected to give its ruling at a later date.

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