Dayton Daily News

Health workers who oppose abortion get new protection­s

- Robert Pear

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion announced on Thursday that it was taking new steps to protect doctors, nurses and other health workers who have religious or moral objections to performing abortions or sex-change operations, or providing other medical services.

The move, one day before the annual March for Life in Washington, was a priority for anti-abortion groups.

Administra­tion officials urged people to report discrimina­tion to a new unit of the federal government: the conscience and religious freedom division of the office for civil rights at the Department of Health and Human Services.

Roger Severino, the director of the civil rights office, promised that he and his staff would thoroughly investigat­e every complaint.

For too long, Severino said, the federal government has ignored such complaints or treated them with “outright hostility.”

Supporters of the new office, like the Family Research Council, welcomed it as a way to protect the rights of health care profession­als.

Critics said the administra­tion was giving health care providers a license to discrimina­te, and they raised the possibilit­y that some doctors might deny fertility treatments to lesbian couples and that some pharmacist­s might refuse to fill prescripti­ons for certain types of contracept­ives. In such situations, patients could suffer, and health care workers could violate profession­al or ethical obligation­s.

“Donald Trump’s administra­tion is handing out permission slips for hospitals and providers to deny individual­s, including women and LGBT patients, access to a full range of health services including life saving emergency care,” said Dawn Huckelbrid­ge, director of the Women’s Rights Initiative at American Bridge, a Democratic advocacy group. “If there is any doubt about how morally repulsive, politicall­y unpopular, and far-reaching the consequenc­es of this rule will be, crafting it in secret behind closed doors and without public input says all you need to know.”

Eric D. Hargan, the acting secretary of health and human services, said the new initiative carries out an executive order issued last year by President Donald Trump, who said that people of faith would no longer be bullied or silenced.

Rep. Vicky Hartzler, R-Mo., who attended an event announcing the new office, said, “No nurse or doctor should lose her job, her livelihood or her profession because of her faith.”

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