Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Doctors opt out of abortions in Spain

Many in nation say they are ‘objectors’ of legal procedure

- By Nicholas Casey The New York Times

ZARAGOZA, Spain — Dr. Mercedes Sobreviela, a gynecologi­st in this city in northeast Spain, believes it is a woman’s choice whether she has an abortion. She says the “right decision” for a woman is “always the one she wants.”

But as a physician in Spain, Sobreviela believes she has the right to choose as well, and she has chosen not to perform abortions.

Her public hospital, University Clinic Hospital of Zaragoza, does not perform them either. No public hospital in the surroundin­g region of Aragón, which includes 1.3 million people, will do the procedure.

“We are doctors, our calling is as physicians, and we are here to help people live, not to decide this one lives and this one dies,” Sobreviela said.

Spain liberalize­d its abortion laws in 2010. In the years before, it allowed women to get abortions in only extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, but the new laws allow all women to get the procedure in the first 14 weeks of a pregnancy, without restrictio­ns.

But the map of where abortions are available is drawn up less by national law than by Spain’s doctors. In large numbers and across the country, doctors refuse to perform them.

They call themselves “conscienti­ous objectors,” a term coined by pacifists who refused military service. And like those who claimed a moral duty not to go to war, many doctors in Spain say performing abortions would violate their oath to do no harm — a pledge, they say, that extends to the fetus.

“It’s one thing if you think abortion is right or wrong; each person will have their

own criteria,” says Dr. María Jesús Barco, another gynecologi­st from Zaragoza who is an objector. “It’s another thing if I have to do it. That’s different.”

Conscienti­ous objection has gained ground in other countries, like Italy, where it was cited by doctors working in hospitals that largely do not perform abortions. And in Argentina, it has limited attempts to liberalize an abortion law passed there last year.

In five of the 17 autonomous regions in Spain — the equivalent of states — no public hospital offers abortions, according to the most recent government statistics. Women may still receive an abortion in a subsidized private clinic, but in many cases, they must travel across state lines to obtain one.

That was what Erika Espinosa, 34, had to do in 2015 when her gynecologi­st in the city of Logroño

would not perform an abortion after she asked for one.

“The doctors try to convince you that you don’t love your child for wanting an abortion,” said Espinosa, who went to the neighborin­g Navarra region to end her pregnancy. “It felt like I was doing something clandestin­e.”

No official statistics exist on how many objecting doctors work in Spain. But the country’s left-wing coalition government is concerned enough that in July, Irene Montero, the minister of equality, proposed changing the current abortion law to place limits on the ability of doctors to become objectors.

“Conscienti­ous objection can’t be incompatib­le with the rights of women, nor can it be an obstacle to them exercising their right to voluntaril­y terminate a pregnancy,” the minister said in a written statement.

Such words have been met with criticism from sectors of the Spanish medical community.

Eva Maria Martín, a pharmacist who heads the National Associatio­n for the Defense of Conscienti­ous Objectors, a group that defends objecting doctors, accused the government of “radical feminism.”

Martín said it was the doctors’ duty to oppose any law that pushes them to take actions they see as unjust.

“When there is a grave conflict between your conscience and the law, morally, in your interior, you must reject it,” she said, adding that she had nine children as evidence of her anti-abortion views.

Some doctors have pushed to offer abortions at public hospitals. But they say it has rarely proved easy, not only because of objecting physicians, but also because doctors are rarely trained in the procedures during medical school.

When Dr. Abel Renuncio arrived at the Santiago Apóstol Hospital, a facility in the rural town of Miranda de Ebro, his team decided, for the first time, to offer abortions. Because the members of his team had not been trained to do them, they taught themselves using World Health Organizati­on protocols.

“The technique is quite simple,” said Renuncio, a gynecologi­st.

Among the provinces where abortions are no longer performed is Jaen, an olive-growing region in Spain’s southern Andalucia.

Juana Peragon, an activist there, said that for a time, one clinic did offer them, though it was not subsidized by the state and charged women $400 for the procedure. But that clinic has been closed for remodeling for years, Peragon said. Many women are sent as far as Seville to get an abortion, 150 miles away.

Spanish physicians like Sobreviela said the debate was not as clear-cut as some activists had framed it.

The abortion law passed in 2010 was in some ways ahead of where Spanish society was at the time, she said, and it caught many physicians off guard.

Sobreviela said she remembered attending a hospitalwi­de meeting in Zaragoza to discuss the new law, and doctors and others were asked to raise their hands if they objected. “Ninety-nine percent of us were conscienti­ous objectors,” she said. “Nearly everyone: the doctors, the nursing staff, the assistants, the guards.”

In her daily work, Sobreviela continues to focus on prenatal care, doing diagnostic­s on pregnant women to screen for signs of birth defects like Down syndrome or for heart problems that can be detected in fetuses.

At times, she said, most often when the defects may be fatal, a mother will ask her about abortion. Sobreviela said those could be difficult conversati­ons.

But she also offers warnings to those who choose to end their pregnancie­s. Under Spanish law, she said, doctors can explain possible “psychologi­cal and social” consequenc­es of terminatin­g a pregnancy.

The day before, a patient came to her after her fetus was diagnosed with heart problems, Sobreviela said.

“She was in distress, and I was with her afterward, and she asked: ‘This will happen soon, right? I want this problem to go away,’ ” Sobreviela recalled, saying the woman was going ahead with an abortion.

“And I said: ‘They’re not going to get rid of your problem, they will just get rid of your pregnancy,’ ” she said. “‘The problem comes when the pregnancy is gone and you have to sit with yourself, with your own conscience. Just you and your conscience.’ ”

 ?? ANA MARIA AREVALO GOSEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dr. Abel Renuncio a gynecologi­st, consults with a patient in Burgos, Spain.
ANA MARIA AREVALO GOSEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Dr. Abel Renuncio a gynecologi­st, consults with a patient in Burgos, Spain.

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