1. I congratulate the Social, Health and Family Affairs
Committee and its rapporteur, Ms McCafferty (United Kingdom, SOC)
on their report on women’s access to lawful medical care: the problem
of unregulated use of conscientious objection. As the rapporteur
rightly points out, the issue of conscientious objection with regard to
lawful medical care has a significant impact on women's access to
health services, particularly in the field of reproductive health
care.
2. Abusive, widespread or unjustified recourse to conscientious
objection in practice drains the law of substance and deprives women
of the lawful care to which they are entitled. In reproductive health
matters this issue takes on special significance. I am therefore
particularly concerned about the statistics cited in Ms McCafferty’s
report. For instance, in Italy 70% of doctors and 50% of anaesthetists
invoke their right of conscientious objection to refuse to perform
abortions, which are nonetheless legal.
3. Mention is also made of the situation of women in rural areas,
who encounter additional difficulties when a doctor refuses to perform
a medical procedure. What alternatives do these women have? What
kind of access to health care is ensured in such circumstances?
The geographical situation should not result in discrimination against
women living in rural areas regarding their access to lawful medical
care of a high standard. This aspect should also be addressed in
the report on the real situation of women in rural areas being prepared
by our fellow committee member Ms Carmen Quintanilla Barba (Spain,
EPP/CD).
4. I concur with the rapporteur that use of conscientious objection
must be governed by comprehensive, clear legislation, going hand
in hand with an oversight and monitoring mechanism to ensure that
health-care providers act in accordance with this legislation. At
the same time, all the necessary measures must be taken to ensure
that women have access to full and unbiased information, within
the timeframe provided for by law, and to guarantee that the right
to health can effectively be exercised. This entails referring the
women concerned to a health-care provider who will perform the desired
lawful medical procedure. As recommended by the World Health Organization
(WHO), provision must be made for referral systems.
5. I consider that use of conscientious objection should be strictly
limited as the voluntary practice of medicine and the free choice
of a specialisation entail agreement to perform a number of lawful
medical procedures prescribed by the public authorities. Those who
are unwilling to perform abortions should not opt to join departments
specialising in gynaecology, obstetrics or even surgery. Would it
be conceivable for a professional soldier to invoke conscientious
objection so as to avoid participating in military operations? In
the sphere of reproductive health, the medical services provided
by public health-care facilities in my view encompass not just medical
and surgical procedures, but also educational and preventive measures,
clear and enlightening information and advice in family planning
matters and, where these are unsuccessful, dealing with unwanted
pregnancies.
6. I would like to stress the need to improve the training of
health-care providers in performing all legal health-care services.
In the United Kingdom, the General Medical Council allows medical
students to choose not to witness an abortion; it nonetheless stresses
the importance of learning about all medical procedures, despite
a conscientious objection and an unwillingness to perform them (see
proposed amendment E).
7. It is also crucial to create a tolerant working environment
– both for objectors and non-objectors. On the one hand, health-care
providers who do object to the performance of legal reproductive
health services, such as abortion, should not be subject to marginalisation
in the work place.
On
the other hand, non-objecting providers who are exposed to hostile
and judgmental behaviour from their colleagues may be deterred from performing
such services. The hostility that non-objectors experience in the
workplace, therefore, has a negative impact on women’s access to
legal reproductive health services (see proposed amendment G).
8. Moreover, it is my personal opinion that health-care providers
who voluntarily choose a medical specialisation should not be able
to espouse their own conception of it, which would lead to the emergence
of disparate standards of health care. The medical professions are
state regulated. If women cannot exercise their right to a legal
abortion because a majority of doctors refuse to perform this procedure,
invoking conscientious objection, what is the point of talking about
women’s rights?
9. In addition, member states should be encouraged to require
that public and private health facilities adhere to the same regulatory
framework related to conscientious objection. In many emergency
situations, indeed, women whose health or lives are at risk may
be unable to reach a public facility in a timely manner, and must
therefore be able to access legal reproductive health services at
the health facility closest to them, regardless of whether it is
public or private (see proposed amendment B).
10. In this connection, in Resolution 1607 (2008) the Parliamentary
Assembly called for access to safe and legal abortion and invited
member states to:
“7.2. guarantee
women’s effective exercise of their right of access to a safe and
legal abortion;
7.3. allow women freedom of choice and offer the conditions
for a free and enlightened choice without specifically promoting
abortion;
7.4. lift restrictions which hinder, de jure or de facto,
access to safe abortion, and, in particular, take the necessary
steps to create the appropriate conditions for health, medical and
psychological care and offer suitable financial cover.”
11. It should be noted that in the same resolution the Assembly
underlined that “the ultimate decision on whether or not to have
an abortion should be a matter for the woman concerned, who should
have the means of exercising this right in an effective way” (paragraph
6).
12. To ensure access to safe and legal abortion, and also access
to universally available, high quality health-care services, I therefore
deem it necessary to regulate recourse to conscientious objection
so that it does not have primacy over and supersede other rights,
in practice depriving women of the possibility to exercise their lawful
rights, in particular in matters of sexual and reproductive health.
As the Social, Health and Family Affairs Committee states in paragraph
4 of its draft resolution, member states have an obligation, on
one hand, to “ensure access to lawful medical care and to protect
the right to health” and, on the other hand, to “ensure respect
for the right of freedom of thought, conscience and religion of
individual health-care providers”. I accordingly invite the committee
to endorse the Social, Health and Family Affairs Committee’s proposals
and to support the seven amendments set out above.