Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Al Jazeera reports that Catholic hospitals are spreading rapidly and that it negatively impacts the medical choices that are available to women.

Courtesy of Al Jazeera:  

Catholic hospitals provide care for 1 in 6 patients in the United States; they are, collectively, the largest not-for-profit health care provider in the country. As secular hospitals merge with Catholic ones, many health care organizations and the communities they serve are on edge. In Washington state, for example, mergers mean that nearly half of hospital beds are in facilities controlled or influenced by the church, and in many regions a Catholic hospital is the sole provider. Nationwide, Catholic health care providers grew by 16 percent from 2001 to 2011. The number of secular nonprofit hospitals dropped by 12 percent in that period; the number of public hospitals fell by 31 percent. 

Catholic health care providers are bound by the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services, a document issued by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops that governs how health care providers should deal with reproductive issues, end-of-life care, the “spiritual responsibility” of Catholic health care and a variety of other concerns. The range of women’s health care options that Catholic facilities offer is limited — sometimes, like when a pregnancy goes wrong, to a deadly degree. And while most doctors have an ethical obligation to inform patients of all their options, Catholic facilities routinely refuse to offer even abortions necessary to save a pregnant woman’s life; their doctors are also barred from telling a patient with a nonviable pregnancy that there are other, often safer options available elsewhere, lest the patient seek care at another facility. (LGBT patients may also run into problems, whether it is with hormone therapy for transgender patients or simply the right of married same-sex partners to be treated as next of kin in making health care decisions).

Proponents of Catholic health care say that which services religious hospitals offer is a First Amendment issue and that the separation of church and state requires the government to remain hands off. Catholic hospitals provide necessary care to the sick and in need, through a well-funded religious institution with many devotees and volunteers who do excellent, important work. 

But Catholic hospitals receive enormous amounts of state and federal funding, in the form of large tax exemptions, Medicare and Medicaid dollars and specific grants for certain types of care. In 2011, Catholic hospitals received $27 billion in public funding, not including tax breaks — nearly half their revenue. Catholic hospitals employ and serve populations that are not predominantly Catholic. One-fifth (PDF) of physicians at religious hospitals reported facing a “clinical ethical conflict” in which their medical judgment was at odds with the hospital’s religious policy. Because Catholic hospitals receive public funds and care for a diverse population, they should have a duty to serve the actual health needs of their patients and the ethical obligations of their staffs over church dogma. 

Instead, they put the dogma first. As a result, rape victims are routinely refused emergency contraception in Catholic hospitals. Women with life-threatening ectopic pregnancies, which are easily ended by a shot of methotrexate or a minor surgery, often find an entire fallopian tube unnecessarily removed — decreasing the odds of future pregnancy — if they seek care at a Catholic facility. And, as Means discovered, even in life-threatening emergencies, Catholic hospitals regularly refuse to terminate pregnancies and may face penalties, including removal of church-affiliated status, if they do so to save the life of the mother. In one case in Arizona, a pregnant mother of four went to a Catholic hospital’s emergency room with a condition so life-threatening that her chances of imminent death without an abortion were nearly certain. She was too ill to transfer to another facility, so the hospital’s administrator, a nun, approved an emergency termination. The woman lived. The nun was excommunicated. Her standing with the church was eventually restored, but the hospital lost its 116-year affiliation with the Catholic Church. 

Refusing to provide female patients with a full range of reproductive care is discrimination. Intentionally providing substandard care when safer, better options are available is monstrous. It means women see their bodies damaged, their fertility impaired and their lives threatened. Low-income women and women in rural areas face the greatest hardships, since they may have no other option for care except a Catholic hospital. Rural living means there may not be another hospital for miles. Poverty means finding a provider that accepts Medicaid and is nearby; distance equals more gas money or more time on public transportation and off work. For many women, the closest abortion clinic is hundreds of miles away. Religion should not be an excuse for public health institutions to discriminate so broadly and do such harm. 

This is just another way that religion is attempting to control the lives of women in this country, and it simply should not be tolerated.

We are in the 21st Century, isn't it time to move past these superstitious restrictions on our lives?

25 comments:

  1. I wonder if there are differences in different areas. The area I live in is served by a huge Catholic Health system. I've had surgery there. My oncologist is part of their system. My co-worker had an ectopic pregnancy terminated there, and when she had her second child, had her tubes tied there. The tubal ligation was only 6 years ago.

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  2. Anonymous6:59 AM

    My niece works for a large hospital/clinics in Seattle that was bought out by the catholic mafia last year. She said a few people chose to leave rather than work for them, but as the primary wage earner she didn't feel she had that option. She is not pleased with many of the changes they have made/plan to make. They do have a hidden agenda.

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    1. Anonymous8:09 AM

      Sorry to disagree, but their agenda is not hidden!

      Delete
  3. Anonymous8:13 AM

    OK. This is from a network that has been proven to hate Americans, and say-on air-that infedels should die. Also, that women should sit sesperate, and gays and anyone that has sex outside of marriage should be stoned to death.

    Way to check your source.

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    1. Okay Al Jazeera is not Al-Qaeda moron.

      Do a little research on their journalistic credentials.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:40 AM

      I have SEEN it on their channel!!! Moron!

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:08 AM

      I'm sorry for the moron part. Having a bad day, and your comment hit me wrong. I apologize for taking it out here.

      I have watched the channel, and the general sentiment is that Muslim people feel that the Koran is 100% the best guide for how one should live their life, and punishment for not following it, including stoning for homosexuality, and adultery, etc.

      This was not just for the extremists, but as general sentiment. I will try to find a link, but my computer is down, not sure how to copy and paste from the phone.

      Delete
  4. Anonymous8:23 AM

    Deni is right. This article sounds more like an editorial and I need more substantiated facts. Some of the claims made in this article don't ring true in my own personal experience.

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    1. It does ring true in mine, going way back. I had a child "out of wedlock" and delivered in a Catholic Hospital in Austin, TX. I was not offered an epidural or anything to mitigate the pain of childbirth because they wanted me to "know that I suffered for my sin". And I paid for this not only monetarily but emotionally. I figure if I or my insurance is paying the bill, I should get what every other patient gets who is in the same situation. They wouldn't let my mother visit me in my room but they sent a priest to "pray with me". I yelled him out of the room and the Nuns admonished me to be quiet. Worst medical experience I have ever had.

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    2. Anonymous10:48 AM

      I delivered 3 children outside of marriage, all at a Catholic hospital, and it was fantastic experience. What happened to you was awful, no question, but it doesn't mean that EVERY catholic hospital is that way.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous1:03 PM

      I have the falsified medical records to prove it, as my ob-gyn was in a Catholic owned medical office. She couldn't prescribe me birth control for bc purposes, so my records falsely state that I had "severe menstrual cramps."

      Delete
    4. Anonymous2:48 PM

      The story from Arizona is absolutely true, and it was a big deal here in Phoenix. The bishop stated outright he would let a mother of four living children die rather than terminate the pregnancy. And he did excommunicate the administrator nun. The only item that isn't quite exact is that the Church didn't cut ties with the hospital; rather, the hospital cut ties with the Church and operates now as a sort of quasi-Catholic entity, by ownership but not by practice.

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    5. Anonymous5:02 PM

      A friend of my sister's had three children by C-section. During her third pregnancy, her doctor told her that she should NOT have any more children after that one. She wanted to get her tubes tied, which would have been a simple procedure to do while she was already open from the section, but the Catholic hospital refused, even though it was a recommendation from her doctor for health reasons. She had to wait to recover from the section, go to another hospital and another doctor (hers wasn't on staff there) and have a second major surgery while taking care of a brand new baby.

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  5. Anonymous8:35 AM

    there is a concentrated effort across the internet to discredit this story. the comment sections are being trolled by obviously paid commenters.

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  6. Excellent article. Well-researched and documented. Thanks for highlighting not only the issue but the source of the reporting, G.

    AJAmerica is one of few that do straight reporting with the means to do exhaustive research on national and international issues thru other bureaus. More links at the original source support this report. I was aware of the issues and the concern of govt funding for orgs that provided less-than-a-full menu of services, but was unaware of the growth pattern of these Catholic hospitals and the decline of those offering Best Practices-based medicine, with hard numbers supporting the argument. The numbers tell me this is a bigger deal than I realized. We should be hearing more from the AMA in the matter, although I understand the org doesn't have the political clout and membership support it once enjoyed. But who else can advocate on behalf of patients who need the services and the docs who want to use Best Practices for the entire patient base of a community? I intend to include AJAmerica with my list of straight news sources, and filter out some of the fauxrage RW mouthpieces. An alternative viewpoint is always helpful to balance complex issues, but only if it is fact-based. Fox,
    Washington Times, et al. provide a nugget of info here and there but few and far between, and it's exhausting to deal with their circus act to filter a true fact-based argument to counter the non-conservative positions, because the "NEWS" reported at FNS and others is not to inform; it is packaged to persuade and give a platform for Roger Ailes' personal ideology, which is not really even based on true conservatism. Personally, I consider the Conservative viewpoint to be a valid argument (although I disagree with it on more issues than I agree with it) because it helps provide a leveling measure in determining priorities of needs versus wants. But Ailes is a propagandist with a party-first perspective.

    Okay, I'm ddrifting off-topic and rambling so I'll close. It's just refreshing to see fact-based news reported w/o the bias and BS to be processed and filtered by the viewer/reader. Check out the link when you have a moment.

    http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2014/2/dangers-of-a-catholichospitaluntold.html

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    1. Anita Winecooler5:36 PM

      I agree 110 percent! "Current" was pretty good, but getting a bit stale when Gore sold it. Al Jazeera does a bang up job at journalism and investigative journalism I think what makes them good is they don't have any skin in the game politically and they're pretty objective.. I love reading news sources from other countries as well, it's kind of a barometer on how we're viewed in general.

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  7. Sally in MI9:54 AM

    OK. Let's see. In 2010 they tried to take over our Government, and took over one chamber and a bunch of state governments. In the South, they are rewriting public school texts to jibe with THEIR beliefs. Religious charter schools take public money to teach their dogma (and Ham has the gall to say that HIS way of teaching leads to critical thinking?) They hate the poor, the jobless, the mentally ill, women and kids. They are now trying to take over our hospitals (with OUR dollars) and let women die needlessly. Some church that is. Some party that GOP is. Now, women, please tell us why you would even consider voting GOP?

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    1. Anonymous11:15 AM

      I hate to say this this way, but if they were elected, then there were enoughpeople to vote them in, and elections have consequences. Isn't that what was being touted when some didn't like what Obama was doing.

      Delete
  8. Anonymous11:00 AM

    Not for profit my ass! Then why are their prices as high or higher than other hospitals?

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  9. Anonymous11:20 AM

    They're buying up hospitals all over the world, even in enlightened countries like Australia. It's been going on for years. I'm told it's expressly an anti-abortion move. That was told to me by a female pro-choice conservative politician. The Catholic church has plenty of money for such takeovers of secular life.

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    1. Anonymous1:02 PM

      My question... why isn't there an effort to "not sell out"? Why are the other hospitals selling, anyway?

      Why isn't this mainstream, instead of one network that won't be taken seriously?

      Delete
  10. Anonymous1:01 PM

    Didi you know that Catholic Hospitals are also often the provider of the abstinence only programs that pass for sex ed in our public schools?

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  11. padoreva1:14 PM

    They took over the hospital in my community and then the changes started. They rebranded themselves "Mercy Health" and now "Dignity Health", started advertising heavily on TV, and laid off many nurses.

    I know of two people who were asked to pay hefty sums after they recovered from surgery. My husband had an emergency appendectomy and they asked him to write a check for $10,000, even though we have excellent insurance. I was in the room at the time. Who brings a checkbook with that kind of balance to the emergency room?

    I've been billed for procedures I never had, only to confront the billing office and be given an "oops" answer.

    Mercy, Dignity, my ass!

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    1. Anita Winecooler5:41 PM

      The same thing's been going on where I live as well. Two of them that I know of used to have "charity care" where the patient paid on a sliding scale according to their income, but have replaced it with a low payment plan with 22 percent interest rates.

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  12. Anita Winecooler5:56 PM

    We live in the outskirts of Philadelphia. We're lucky that there are at least 12 choices of hospital systems to use, seven of them are Catholic hosptials. Before they conglomerated, they offered good care at competitive prices but they always toed the line when it came to Catholic Dogma. A neighbor a few blocks away have a daughter who's mentally challenged. They refused any form of birth control, even with parental consent. I can't imagine being in a situation where there weren't any other choices nearby who would give the patient the care they needed.
    So they not only let dogma trump science, but they get a tax break that secular hospitals don't.

    Something's gotta change and change soon. My biggest fear is one of my daughters being taken to one of those hosptials and being denied the medical care she deserves.

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