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Pro-life nurse forced to assist an abortion

Pro-life nurse forced to assist an abortion

This is certainly not an unusual case, or else we wouldn’t have federal statutes to prevent it. In New York, a Catholic nurse was forced to participate in abortion, despite the fact that her supervisors knew of her moral objection to it. When she initially refused, they threatened her job.

The Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) has filed a lawsuit on behalf of a Catholic nurse who was forced to participate in an abortion, despite voicing her moral objections.

Catherina Cenzon-DeCarlo, a nurse at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, was instructed to assist in a late second-trimester abortion for a woman 22 weeks into her pregnancy. The hospital had known of the nurse’s religious objections to abortion since she was hired in 2004.

Cenzon-DeCarlo reminded her supervisors of her religious objections, but was told that if she did not participate, she would be charged with “insubordination and patient abandonment,” which could result in disciplinary action and the possible loss of her job and nursing license

Hospital officials told Cenzon-DeCarlo that the situation was an “emergency,” although evidence suggests that this was not the case. The hospital itself labeled the case as a “Category II,” meaning that the operation needed to take place within six hours. This would have allowed enough time to find another nurse without moral objections to assisting in the abortion, her lawyers said.

Matt Bowman, legal counsel for the ADF, explained that the hospital could not legally have required the nurse to participate in the abortion even if the case had been a “Category I,” meaning that the patient required “immediate surgical intervention for life or limb threatening conditions.” Federal statutes prohibit recipients of federal health funds from requiring employees to perform abortions, Bowman told CNA.

However, the evidence in the case suggested that the patient was not even at the “Category II” level, as the hospital had claimed. When the woman was brought into the room, Cenzon-DeCarlo observed no indications that the case was a medical emergency. The woman’s blood pressure was not at a crisis level, and standard procedures for patients in crisis had not been taken. Yet the nurse was still required to aid in the abortion.

When CNA contacted Mount Sinai, officials refused to comment or explain why the nurse was asked to participate in the abortion. Officials stated that they would not comment because a lawsuit is pending.

Now, the ADF has filed a lawsuit against Mount Sinai for violating Cenzon-DeCarlo’s rights of conscience.

… Earlier this month, President Obama promised that a “robust conscience clause” would be forthcoming, but critics are skeptical after his earlier decision to repeal conscience provisions put in place by the Bush administration.

My first thought is how cruel this is — to force someone to participate in something that they have such a strong moral objection to. If her supervisors knew of her objections to performing abortions for five years now, and then forced her to assist one anyways, then that seems to me like a petty, cruel thing to do. As explained in the article, the hospital is claiming that the patient was a Category II case, meaning the operation needed to take place within six hours. That would have been more than enough time to find a nurse without moral objections to perform the abortion. Yet instead, they sought out the Catholic nurse who they knew had moral and religious objections to abortion, and forced her to do it. That is cruel, and unnecessarily so.

Unfortunately, this is all too common and in a variety of ways. It’s mostly thanks to feminists who howl in rage if anyone has a moral objection against anything they feel is a “reproductive right”. Doctors and nurses who don’t want to perform abortions, pharmacists who don’t want to dispense the morning after pill or contraception… they’re all told that they’re required to do these things and if they don’t like it, to get out of their field. Organizations like Pharmacists for Life International find themselves the target of feminist wrath. And whether it’s regarding pharmacists, doctors, or nurses, the end point is still the same each time: it’s about restricting choice. This is America, where free-market capitalism is supposed to reign. A business owner can operate his or her business how they want to. They can sell whatever goods or products they want to — and likewise, refuse to sell whatever goods or products they don’t want to sell. Customers, meanwhile, are free to shop wherever they choose. If they don’t like a pharmacy that refuses to sell contraception, or a doctor’s office that won’t perform abortions, they can go elsewhere. Some people though — ironically, most so-called pro-choicers — don’t want people to have that choice, though. Abortion is legal, so therefore, all doctors and nurses must be willing to perform it, no matter what their religious and moral principles tell them.

What’s worrying is how prevalent these cases may become if Obama’s government run healthcare reform passes. Obama is arguably the most extreme pro-abortion president we’ve ever had. This is the guy who voted three times against the Born Alive Infant Protection Act, which would guarantee medical treatment for babies who survive abortions. He’s repealing conscience provisions put in place by President Bush. If his health care reform passes, complete with the inevitable more taxpayer funding for abortion, what kind of protection are pro-life doctors and nurses going to have? My guess would be very little. Hopefully Cenzon-DeCarlo wins her suit.

No one should have to be forced to do something that they feel goes against their religious and moral principles. But in Obama’s hopier, changier America, is that where we’re heading?

Hat Tip: Stop the ACLU

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7 Comments
  • Dale says:

    Cassy, I just found your blog from your post on HotAir, and I wanted to say thanks. I think you have sound conservative principles, are a great blogger, and plan on making your blog a daily read.

    And tell your boyfriend thanks for his service!

  • Line up supervisors, muster seven good men with rifles. Squad Ready, Squad Aim, FIRE! Problem solved.

  • Bob says:

    Disagreed about pharmacists. Health care workers are supposed to treat everyone as equal without imposing their own personal beliefs. They are supposed to do what is right for the patient. Refusing to provide birth control because they think it’s an ‘abortion pill’ is nothing more than forcing their own moral beliefs onto a patient, which is wrong. Birth control is actually prescribed for many more things besides ‘birth control.’ As for Plan B, it is *NOT* an ‘abortion pill’ at all.

    I am in health care, and while I might be completely offended by the immoral act of a patient, it is my duty to treat that patient and not impose my personal or religious beliefs on them.
    “And whether it’s regarding pharmacists, doctors, or nurses, the end point is still the same each time: it’s about restricting choice” – right. By a health care worker letting their own religious beliefs interfere with their duty. *THEY* are the ones restricting choice.
    “No one should have to be forced to do something that they feel goes against their religious and moral principles.” — unless they’re a liberal, because they should just accept and deal with whatever restrictions we’ve placed upon them in the name of The Lord. Right? That’s exactly what you’re saying.

    Sometimes it’s hard to be in the middle in the United States. There really isn’t a party for us.

  • Sue says:

    This case is a little bit more invilved than you all think. This was a case about a nurse who took paid call to be available for overtime shift in surgery. It does not look like the hospital threated her job as much as they threatend her ability to take call.

    If you think about it realistically, when you are on call at a time when there is less staff than usual, you should be able to complete the entire job. On top of being paid overtime, she wanted them to call in another overtime nurse to cover that case. Two nurses to do one job, only one person won’t do the job she is called in to do.

    I feel for her. But frankly she should not be working at a place that does things hat are immoral to her. There are plenty of catholic hospitals in the area.

    I have worked with nurses who pull the conscience clause out a here and there. They are offered work for the day on a different unit – so they get their shift – but cry foul that they are kicked out of their home unit.

    As a bedside nurse I will say – you need to be able to do the whole job.

  • Daredevil says:

    “As a bedside nurse I will say – you need to be able to do the whole job.”

    And when faced before the judges at Nuremberg, the Nazis used the defense that they were just following orders.

  • Daredevil says:

    “unless they’re a liberal, because they should just accept and deal with whatever restrictions we’ve placed upon them in the name of The Lord. Right? That’s exactly what you’re saying.”

    IN this case liberals are the ones putting restructions upon a pro-lifer in the name of tolerance- which really means promote abortions at expense of choices of others.

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