Nation's
Most Comprehensive Medical Conscience Rights
Legislation
Letter to Members of the Senate Health, Children, Families, Aging & Long Term Care Committee
RE: AB 207, the Conscience Protection Act
Susan Armacost (Legislative Director, Wisconsin Right to Life)
The underlying principle embodied in AB 207 is
that health care professionals, medical students, health care facilities
and medical schools should not be forced to participate in activities
that involve the deliberate destruction of human life. . .
On Thursday, September 15, you will be hearing
public testimony on Assembly Bill 207, the
Conscience Protection Act, authored by Sen.
Carol Roessler and Rep. Jean Hundertmark.
Wisconsin Right to Life strongly supports AB 207
and urges your support of this legislation.
The underlying principle embodied in AB 207 is
that health care professionals, medical students,
health care facilities and medical schools should
not be forced to participate in activities that
involve the deliberate destruction of human life.
The legislation clearly outlines what those
activities are…abortion, euthanasia, assisted
suicide, the deliberate destruction of human embryos
for research or other purposes, and the use of the
body parts of aborted babies.
It cannot be credibly argued that the particular
activities outlined in AB 207 are anything less than
the deliberate destruction of human life. Those
individuals who are involved in Wisconsin's health
care community should have the right to refuse to
deliberately destroy a human life in the ways
outlined in the bill, even when it is legal to
destroy that life.
Assembly Bill 207 does nothing to prevent any of the
bill's outlined activities from taking place nor
does it affect the ability of any health care
professional or facility to participate in those
activities if they so desire. In this regard, AB 207
epitomizes the concept of "freedom of choice" for
Wisconsin's health care community. But in spite of
this, those who oppose AB 207 have resorted to
blatant fabrications about the legislation in
attempts to defeat the bill.
Falsehood:
Planned Parenthood and other pro-abortion groups
have fabricated the notion that AB 207 covers
contraceptives.
Fact: Nothing in AB 207 deals with
contraceptives. In fact, the bill specifically
exempts contraceptives.
Falsehood: Planned Parenthood and other
pro-abortion groups continue to falsely claim that
AB 207 allows doctors, nurses and pharmacists to
withhold information from their patients.
Fact:
Nothing in AB 207 would provide conscience rights
for health care professionals who withhold
information from their patients. The legislation
provides conscience rights only in regard to
participating in the specific activities outlined in
the bill and discussed above. One only has to read
the bill's definition of "participate in" to see
that Planned Parenthood has fabricated the argument
that the bill provides conscience protection for
withholding information. That definition reads,
"'Participate in' means to perform; practice; engage
in; assist in; recommend; counsel in favor of; make
referrals for; prescribe, dispense, or administer
drugs or devices, other than contraceptive articles,
as defined ins. 450.155 (1) (a), for; or otherwise
promote or encourage.'" The ways a health care
professional can refuse to participate are clearly
stated in this definition, which does not include
the phrase, "provide information."
Falsehood: Planned Parenthood and other
pro-abortion groups continue to falsely claim that
AB 207 allows doctors, nurses and pharmacists to
abandon their patients when they refuse to
participate in an activity involving the intentional
destruction of human life.
Fact: Conscientious health care workers
will continue to care for their patients. They will
help their patients explore life-affirming
alternatives, giving them information on why a life
destructive option is not good medicine for the
patient. If the patient is insistent on pursuing an
option such as an elective abortion, a pro-life
doctor has the right to refuse to refer, that is, to
locate an abortion provider for the patient since
that would make the pro-life doctor complicit in the
act of abortion. The pro-life doctor will, however,
cooperate with the transfer of the care of the
patient and the appropriate patient health care
records to any health care provider chosen by the
patient. In fact, AA1 to AB 207, passed by the
Assembly, reaffirms current law (s.146.83) that
requires, among other things, that a patient's
health care records must be provided to the
patient's health care provider upon request. This
amendment makes it clear that the various conscience
protections afforded under AB 207 do not extend to a
person, health care provider or health care facility
that violates s. 146.83.
Falsehood: Planned Parenthood and other
pro-abortion groups have literally "made up" the
following argument that AB 207 "denies women access
to infertility services because it allows a doctor
who has a personal objection to in vitro
fertilization to refuse women and their families
with information about or referrals to infertility
clinics."
Fact: The legislation has absolutely
nothing to do with infertility treatments and
provides no conscience rights whatsoever regarding
infertility treatments. Medical professionals who
have a moral objection to providing infertility
treatments will not have conscience protections
under AB 207. Again, the only activities for which
conscience rights are provided under AB 207 are
abortion, euthanasia, assisted suicide, the
deliberate destruction of human embryos and the use
of the body parts of aborted babies. In vitro
fertility treatments are intended to create embryos
who will be carried to term, not destroyed.
Falsehood: Planned Parenthood falsely
claims that AB 207 would take "away a family's right
to make important medical decisions for
incapacitated loved ones."
Fact: There is absolutely nothing in AB
207 that would infringe on a family's right to make
medical decisions for an incapacitated individual.
Whether a patient is incapacitated or fully
functioning doesn't change the fact that AB 207
merely protects the conscience rights of those
health care professionals who do not want to
deliberately kill their patients. If a family
requested that food and water be withheld from an
incapacitated patient, like Terri Schiavo, who was
not terminally ill and not dying and who had not
signed an advance directive, a medical
professional's conscience rights should be protected
if he/she would not want to remove food and water
from this patient. After all, if the patient is not
dying from an underlying disease or condition, the
removal of food and water will deliberately cause
the death of the patient…an act that is tantamount
to euthanasia. No medical professional should be
forced to participate in such a situation. But
again, this has nothing at all to do with Planned
Parenthood's ridiculous claim that AB 207 would take
away a family's right to make important medical
decisions for incapacitated loved ones.
Falsehood: Planned Parenthood and other
pro-abortion groups continue to falsely claim that
women's lives would be endangered by AB 207 if a
woman could die if she continues her pregnancy.
Fact: Doctors would do everything possible
to preserve the life of a pregnant woman. It is self
evident that the unborn child will not survive if
the mother dies. These physicians would focus their
care on saving the life of both the mother and her
baby. In cases such as an ectopic (tubal) pregnancy,
a doctor will remove the embryo from the woman's
fallopian tube knowing that the embryo will not
survive. In all cases where saving the mother's life
can only be accomplished at the risk of losing the
baby, doctors will work tirelessly to save the
mother's life.
One final point, dealing with referrals, needs to
be addressed. Pro-abortion groups and other
opponents of AB 207 want to force a health care
professional who refuses to destroy a life, to
literally get on the phone and find another health
care professional who will destroy the life and make
arrangements for the patient to see him/her. This is
outrageous! AB 207 protects these health care
professionals from having to "make referrals"
because being forced to find someone who will
destroy a life is just as morally reprehensible as
directly destroying the life. AB 207 affirms current
Wisconsin laws regarding patient health care records
and advance health care directives. AB 207, as
amended by AA 1 which was adopted by the Assembly,
clearly reaffirms the duty to transfer patient
health care records. Nothing in AB 207 authorizes a
health care professional or a health care facility
to conceal or withhold a patient health care record
in violation of the current law governing patient
health care records. AB 207 also retains the current
law concerning living wills and power of attorney
for health care documents which require a physician
to make a good faith effort to transfer the patient
to another physician who will comply with the
patient's directions regarding the withholding or
withdrawal of feeding tubes.
Wisconsin Right to Life urges you to support AB
207 and to reject amendments that may be offered by
opponents of the legislation.