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Catholics and Healthcare Reform
An Interview with Bishop Robert F. Vasa
In late October, Bishop Vasa sat
down with Mike Sullivan to talk about healthcare. The two
were attending the Catholic Medical Association’s annual
conference; Bishop Vasa is the episcopal advisor for the CMA.
Following the interview, Bishop Vasa added, “I
was asked what the most critical issues were, and
while the issues I have touched on are certainly identified
as the most critical, they are not by any means the only issues.
Others include a faithful application of the Church social
teaching, which the House bill does not necessarily properly
represent, as well as the principle of subsidiarity. I know
that my Catholic physician friends are very concerned about
conscience rights, but they are also concerned about further
government intrusion into the heart of the physician-patient
relationship, which must be preserved and protected as the
very cornerstone of any reform efforts.”
What is the most significant issue facing today’s
Catholics regarding healthcare?
As we look at the healthcare bill as it is being discussed
and debated, there are two major issues we look at in the
Catholic Church. First, the life issues and whether or not
abortion will be covered with federal dollars. That would
certainly be offensive to any Catholic who recognizes and
understands the need to preserve the dignity of human life.
Any tax-funded healthcare plan absolutely cannot have any
complicity in the evil and crime of abortion, because it’s
clear that abortion is not health care. It simply is not,
and it’s offensive to me as a Catholic bishop that there
would be some consideration that abortion would be looked
at as legitimate healthcare funded by the nation. That’s
absolutely untenable, and every Catholic should recognize
the conflict that puts them in.
The other issue, and it goes right along with abortion, is
the need to preserve the conscience rights of heathcare workers.
In the same way that we as Catholics should not be forced
to have our tax dollars used to pay for abortions, so also
physicians who maintain the sanctity of life should not be
coerced into providing services which they, in the intimacy
of their own hearts and in their relationship with God, recognize
they cannot legitimately do. We respect the conscience rights
of, I think, every religion, and we really should to the extent
that we can, but somehow Catholic physicians, Christian physicians
who have an opposition to contraception, to abortion, to assisted
suicide, are in many ways marginalized and made to feel like
they are out of step with the culture and that they have no
right to follow their consciences on these matters.
We’re working to change the laws, legitimately, but
we’re not violating their consciences when we are defending
life, whereas they are violating our consciences when they
tell us that we have no right to defend life and that we have
to participate in the evil procedures which they are proposing.
So those two elements, in terms of the present healthcare
debate—the right to life, the dignity of human life,
and the right of healthcare workers to abstain from those
procedures that they legitimately find morally offensive—are
absolutely major elements.
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