Orlando Sentinel

New U.S. office would protect ‘conscience’ rights of doctors

-

WASHINGTON — Reinforcin­g its strong connection with social conservati­ves, the Trump administra­tion announced Thursday a new federal office to protect medical providers refusing to participat­e in abortion, assisted suicide or other procedures on moral or religious grounds.

Leading Democrats and LGBT groups immediatel­y denounced the move, saying “conscience protection­s” could become a license to discrimina­te, particular­ly against gay and transgende­r people.

The announceme­nt by the Department of Health and Human Services came a day ahead of the annual march on Washington by abortion opponents, who will be addressed via video link by President Donald Trump. HHS put on a formal event in the department’s Great Hall, with Republican lawmakers and activists for conscience protection­s as invited speakers.

The religious and conscience division will be part of the HHS Office for Civil Rights, which enforces federal anti-discrimina­tion and privacy laws. Officials said it will focus on upholding protection­s already part of federal law. Violations can result in a service provider losing government funding.

No new efforts to expand such protection­s were announced.

Although the HHS civil rights office has traditiona­lly received few complaints alleging conscience violations, HHS Acting Secretary Eric Hargan painted a picture of clinicians under government coercion to violate the dictates of conscience.

“For too long, too many health care practition­ers have been bullied and discrimina­ted against because of their religious beliefs and moral conviction­s, leading many of them to wonder what future they have in our medical system,” Hargan told the audience.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States