Trump announces 'conscience objection' rule for medical care is finalized

The Trump administration announced a new rule on religious conscience protections for the medical field on Thursday, aimed at protecting religious and moral objectors from participating in or paying for services such as abortion, sterilization and assisted suicide.
The proposal was first unveiled in January 2018.
"Just
today we finalized new protections of conscience rights for physicians,
pharmacists, nurses, teachers, students and faith-based charities.
They've been wanting to do that a long time," Trump said during a National Day of Prayer service at the White House Rose Garden on Thursday.
Some
civil rights groups, however, have objected to the new Trump
administration's final rule, saying it will negatively affect women's
health and that of transgender patients.
The Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights said in a statement on Thursday that this final rule replaces one from 2011 that it deemed "inadequate."
According
to the office, the rule will protect individuals and health care
entities from unwanted involvement with services such as abortion,
sterilization or assisted suicide. The rule, according to the office,
reestablishes existing protections created by Congress.
The final rule also notes that complaints submitted to the office about gender dysphoria-related surgeries will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
The proposed conscience rule was submitted
in January 2018 alongside the Department of Health and Human Services
creation of the the Conscience and Religious Freedom Division within its
civil rights office, which provides resources and personnel to
enforcing the new guidelines and ensuring compliance.
The Sunlight Foundation reported
that last month the HHS Office of Civil Rights overhauled its mission
statement, to heavily emphasize the office's role in protecting
"conscience and free exercise of religion."
The
office's director, Roger Severino, touted the final rule in a
statement: "Finally, laws prohibiting government funded discrimination
against conscience and religious freedom will be enforced like every
other civil rights law."
Vanita
Gupta, president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human
Rights, which aims to "promote and protect the rights of all persons in
the US," said in a statement that the rule should be "scrapped."
"HHS's
final denial of care rule will substantially harm the health and
well-being of many -- in particular women and transgender patients. The
government should protect all patients from discrimination, not make it
easier for those in the health care system to discriminate," Gupta, a
former civil rights official at the Justice Department, said.
"The rule is also arbitrary and capricious and exceeds the scope of the laws that it seeks to enforce," Gupta said.
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