Pro-life demonstrators. The HHS rule protects health workers who object to providing abortion services and other care. Istock |
The Trump Administration is protecting providers who deny medical care. This is “an attempt at state-sanctioned discrimination.”
January 19, 2018
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By AIDS United
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AIDS United, the National alliance of State & Territorial AIDS
Directors (NASTAD), the National Coalition of STD Directors, the
National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC) and The AIDS Institute jointly
condemned the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
announcement today, January 19, of the formation of a new Conscience and
Religious Freedom Division (CRFD) in the HHS Office for Civil Rights
(OCR). The CRFD will be tasked with “restor[ing] federal enforcement of
our nation’s laws that protect the fundamental and unalienable rights of
conscience and religious freedom.” To those of us who work to promote
the health of LGBTQ people, those living with HIV, including people of
color, and other marginalized communities, we recognize this as
dog-whistle politics and an attempt at state-sanctioned discrimination.
The
Trump administration is extending federal, legal cover to providers who
can potentially deny medical care for transgender individuals, women,
or same-sex couples, including the full range of reproductive health
services and any other procedure an employee or licensed health facility
may object to, on so-called “moral” grounds. The new division will
invite health professionals to misinterpret and ignore current legal and
medical standards, putting the health and safety of patients at risk.
In
its announcement of the office, HHS spokesperson OCR Director Roger
Severino offered the false choice that “no one should be forced to
choose between helping sick people and living by one’s deepest moral or
religious convictions.” However, we contend that no one should be denied
medical care because their doctor or provider objects to their sexual
orientation, gender identity, or reproductive autonomy. LGBTQ and other
minority and marginalized communities, especially those living with HIV,
already face discrimination and significant barriers to accessing
critical prevention and care services.
The Office of
Civil Rights should focus its efforts on ensuring access to care,
particularly for communities who suffer devastating health disparities
because of the discrimination they face. In its denial of the experience
of those whose very lives are endangered by provider discrimination,
the CRFD makes a mockery of the Office of Civil Rights and we urge the
administration to reverse course.
AIDS
United (AU), NASTAD, the National Coalition of STD Directors (NCSD),
NMAC, and The AIDS Institute (TAI) are national non-partisan, non-profit
organizations focused on ending HIV in the U.S. They have been working
in partnership to identify and share resources to sustain successes and
progress we have made in HIV and STD prevention, care and treatment in
the United States.
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