Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Catholic rules, women’s health

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Re “Hospital finally rid of Catholic healthcare rules,” column, Jan. 12

Kudos to Hoag Memorial Hospital in Orange County for ending its decade-long affiliatio­n with a mammoth Catholic hospital system. Michael Hiltzik’s insightful column makes clear how Providence St. Joseph Health dealt in bad faith (pun intended) with its suppressio­n of Hoag’s healthcare services for women.

Providence’s insistence that Hoag not perform abortions was understand­able; Catholic doctrine adamantly opposes that procedure. But Providence soon discontinu­ed its healthcare provider network’s coverage of costs for contracept­ives prescribed by Hoag’s OB-GYNs.

This noxious turn exposed the misogynist­ic illogic of the religious doctrine: If they deem abortion a mortal sin, why don’t they abide access to contracept­ives, the prudent use of which prevents pregnancie­s that lead women to contemplat­e abortion?

Hoag has set a good example for other Catholicaf­filiated hospitals that suffer misogynist­ic, faithbased healthcare constraint­s.

Edgar M. Martinez

Orcutt, Calif.

How many people understand that the Catholic Church is patriarcha­l to its core? Do people accept truly that women are defying the laws of God by trying to control their fertility, let alone pregnancy? From God’s lips to the ears of the bishops, apparently they are indeed.

Catholic doctrine allows women three choices: virginity, abstinence or bondage to their wombs. It’s not surprising that these choices seem reasonable to many men, but how astonishin­g for so many women to cling to the freedom of their chains.

Women have a right to a life of their own choosing, but how feeble an individual woman is against the might of the Catholic Church. As the song says, “You never ask questions when God’s on your side.”

Karen Robinson-Stark

Pasadena

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