|
|
|

|

“I have been pondering what to do about
prescribing contraception, and I would like any
input from residents or people who have ‘been
there.’”
---- A Young Doctor
|

The main question facing a young doctor beginning an ob/gyn
internship is this: How do I help shape the culture of the
medical profession with the authentic values of the Gospel?
How do I bring my convictions, and values, to bear upon my
chosen profession? Everyone must answer this question,
according to his or her profession and circumstances.
Specifically, how should a new doctor address the abortion,
sterilization and contraceptive culture in modern medicine?
Contraception and sterilization are serious matters. It is a
false distinction to say that abortion is serious, but
contraception and sterilization are only relatively serious.
All of these are deadly to the soul, and are bad medicine.
Abortion kills a perfectly healthy unborn baby.
Sterilization destroys a perfectly healthy fertility system.
Contraception turns against fertility, and temporarily
sterilizes a sexual act which nature designed for
procreation. The root cause of abortion is the abuse of sex;
which is promiscuity and contraception. Contraception always
leads to more abortion, not less. A principled doctor cannot
play with any of these matters. They cannot present
themselves as an accomplice to these deeds.
“My program director stated that he would fully support me
in whatever decisions I made.” This means that the intern
can state his position: “I cannot perform abortions,
sterilizations, or dispense contraception because they are
bad medicine and because my conscience tells me that they
are serious moral evils. There are thousands of other
medical procedures I can perform, but I will not be an
accomplice in these three.”
He is a physician and therefore he should be healing people
instead of putting harmful chemicals in healthy bodies.
Prescribing contraceptives opens up the possibility of
cooperating in giving abortifacients. This is both material
and formal cooperation.
Most patients look to their doctors for good medical advice.
Doctors should take advantage of this and offer their
reasons for encouraging people to stay away from the
contraceptive culture. They could point to the multi-billion
dollar industry the pharmaceuticals have created, and now
promote through slick advertisements in the mass media.
Doctors could explain the connection between contraception
and their social consequences: greater promiscuity and
infidelity in marriage, a 50% divorce rate, a lack of male
responsibility, 35% of children now born outside of
marriage, more single parent (and poor) families,
dysfunctional families, an epidemic of STDs, lack of good
male role models … Bad medicine has wide social and moral
consequences.
A Catholic doctor who sacrifices his principles, and
violates his conscience, by making referrals to other
doctors who will prescribe contraceptives and do
sterilizations is giving bad example to other residents and
patients. Their resistance to serious evils should be more
than a token one. They should refuse to either prescribe
contraceptives or make referrals.
Pope Paul VI, in his encyclical Humanae Vitae, encourages
doctors thus:
“Let us express our highest admiration for doctors and for
those health professionals who, in their mission desire to
safeguard what is compatible with their Christian vocation
rather than what corresponds to some human advantage.
Therefore let them constantly pursue only those solutions
that are in accord with faith and right reason. And let them
strive to gain the agreement and the compliance of their
colleagues in this matter. Moreover, let them consider it
their special mission to acquire all necessary learning in
this difficult area (NFP). Thereby they may be able to give
good advice to spouses seeking their counsel and to direct
them along the right path. Spouses rightly seek such
direction from them” (HV 27).
If the pressure on a new doctor to conform to the
contraceptive culture is too great, then he or she should go
elsewhere and seek employment where he will not have to
violate his conscience. More Catholic and pro-life doctors
should consider starting up totally pro-life medical
clinics. There are many successful examples of these around
the country, and these doctors are very willing to share
their experiences. These clinics give a powerful witness to
Gospel values and good medicine. Many families seek them
out.
There are some evils in our society that will only change
when enough conscientious people refuse to participate in
them. Abortion and contraception are two of these.
The life issues belong to doctors and nurses in a special
way. The Church looks to them to take real leadership in
bringing the values of the Gospel, and the light of Christ,
to the medical profession. This will create some career
problems and temporary tensions, but this is the price that
witnesses to the Faith have always been asked to give
throughout the centuries.
Cordially yours,
Fr. Dan McCaffrey www.nfpoutreach.org
NFP Outreach
- back to
Q & A --
|
|