The Proposed Rule on “Moral Exemptions & Accommodations for Coverage of Certain Preventive Services Under the Affordable Care Act” Harkens Back to the Dark, Early Days of the AIDS Epidemic”
02/20/2018
_______________________________________________________________________________________
WASHINGTON, D.C. (February 20, 2018) – It is the position of the ADAP Advocacy Association (aaa+®) and the Community Access National Network
(CANN) that the proposed changes put forth by the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) and the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) are
unacceptable, at best, and unconscionable, at worst. People living with
HIV/AIDS have been down this path, before; our community refuses to go
down this path, again.
“Under the guise of
"religious freedom," HHS and the OCR have put forth a proposal that
would provide broad and seemingly unfettered “protections” for
individuals and entities that refuse to provide healthcare services on
the basis of religious, conscientious, and/or moral objections. Both
Congress and courts have, in the past, allowed conscientious exemptions
to stand for specific procedures and services – abortion, sterilization,
contraception, and assisted suicide. These exemptions are, according to
the document put forth by the Trump Administration, not good enough. As
such, they propose expanding those exemptions to include virtually any
healthcare service one may find objectionable, up to and including
refusing to provide services to persons whom they find objectionable.
This amounts to nothing less than sanctioned discrimination by the
government.”
For the past twenty
years, both states and the federal government have been gradually
inserting "religious exemption" privileges into our legislatures in an
effort to appease the faux moral outrage expressed by a certain segment
of Americans who feel they should not have to do their jobs if it means
serving people they dislike or providing services that, while perfectly
legal, they find objectionable. This broad overreach by the Executive
Branch – a branch that is not responsible for crafting, drafting, or
passing laws – allows that extreme segment the ability to deny service,
so long as they evince barely a soupçon of religious, conscientious,
and/or moral objection. This segment has won its exemption from
reproductive and end of life services; they must not be granted carte
blanche to refuse service to those most in need.
Moreover, the proposed
rule goes further to suggest that those who refuse on religious,
conscience, or moral grounds cannot be forced by current (and presumably
future) federal agencies or state agencies to perform these tasks. If
this sounds similar to clerks' refusal to provide marriage services to
same-sex couples based on these objections, that’s because it is.
If the government pays
individuals, then they should not be exempted from providing services
for any reason other than ability or illegality. The compromise with the
clerks involved allowing them to refer them to employees who were able
to provide services without prejudice; the proposed rule allows
objectors to refuse references to better suited healthcare providers.
For those people who
survived or lived through the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the 1980s and 1990s
can attest to what happens when healthcare providers and workers refuse
to treat patients on the basis of religious, conscientious, and/or moral
objections – the cost is always paid in human lives. During the initial
outbreak and spread of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, many physicians and
healthcare professionals refused to treat patients living with HIV/AIDS.
While many ascribed their refusal to safety concerns, others spoke of
their moral objections to treating patients whose “lifestyle choices”
resulted in becoming infected with the HIV virus. It was unacceptable,
then; it is unconscionable, now.
The proposed rule
essentially provides healthcare providers and workers an "out" from
having to perform routine services, so long as they protest a religious,
conscientious, and/or moral objection to doing so. How far will these
"protections" allow them to go? Will they be able to deny services to
those whose religious or political affiliations they disagree? Will they
be allowed to deny services to racial or ethnic minorities? Perhaps,
they will be allowed to deny services to patients whose citizenship is
in question? The document put forth by the Trump Administration does
little to assuage these concerns, despite its hand wringing about the
protections put in place to protect providers.
HHS, with this proposed
change, attempts to make the immoral moral by allowing objectors
essentially blanket authority to deny services, and does so using the
Office of Civil Rights – perhaps its most egregious display of enmity.
That this Administration proposes allowing providers who serve the most
vulnerable populations – recipients of Medicaid, CHIP, and Medicare
benefits – to deny services is unconscionable. HHS should immediately
remove from consideration this proposed rule.
Those living with
HIV/AIDS and any number of serious chronic medical conditions must be
certain that they are always able to access healthcare services without
fear of being refused treatment on the grounds of religious,
conscientious, and/or more objection. As such, both the ADAP Advocacy
Association and Community Access National Network vociferously oppose
this proposal, and invite other organizations to do so, as well.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.