“What doctors told us is sometimes for abortion … there was a sense of, ‘You’re on your own,’” said Dr. Debra B. Stulberg, assistant professor of family medicine at the University of Chicago.
The patient learned she had brain cancer in her first trimester of pregnancy. She needed chemotherapy and abortion care.
“I’ve got a woman whose life is threatened by brain cancer,” her doctor, an OB-GYN at a Catholic hospital, told authorities there. “I need to do a termination.”
Catholic hospitals follow religious directives that generally bar certain types of health care, including abortions, except when the patient is in imminent danger.
The hospital refused the treatment, telling the OB-GYN to refer his patient elsewhere.
“They said, ‘Go take her to another hospital. Take her to another place. Those places are available to you. We don’t have to do it here…’,” the OB-GYN explained.
The case is among many contained in a new paper, “Referrals for Services Prohibited in Catholic Health Care Facilities,” which will be published in the September issue of Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health. The study explores whether Catholic hospitals make timely referrals, provide complete and accurate […]