• The Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services (the Directives), issued by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), govern care at these facilities. (aclu.org)
  • The Directives prohibit a range of reproductive health services, including contraception, sterilization, many infertility treatments, and abortion care, even when a woman's health or life is in danger. (aclu.org)
  • In 2021, he signed the Protecting Pregnancy Act that allows doctors who practice in Catholic-run hospitals to bypass ethical-religious directives and provide medically necessary abortion when a woman's life is in danger. (ktvu.com)
  • Catholic hospitals operate under the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services , which for obstetrics and gynecology residents may create barriers to receiving adequate training in family planning. (allenpress.com)
  • the hospital was Catholic, and a procedure that results in sterilization is a violation of the Ethical and Religious Directives that, with rare exceptions, govern Catholic hospitals. (vox.com)
  • Catholic facilities argue that the directives are protected under religious liberty laws . (vox.com)
  • The implications here are clear for patients like Minton, but the Ethical and Religious Directives also frown on fertility treatment. (vox.com)
  • Catholic-affiliated hospitals follow the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which require hospitals to refuse to provide care that conflicts with the moral teachings of the Catholic Church. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Catholic facilities must follow ethical and religious directives that say they can't provide abortion or sterilization services and may not 'promote or condone' contraceptives. (healthcaredive.com)
  • Religious Directives written by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops forbid doctors in Catholic hospitals from performing abortions unless a woman is in grave danger. (typepad.com)
  • Bishops' health care directives depriving poor women of most commonly used form of contraception, especially at non-Catholic hospitals merged with Catholic hospitals. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Washington, DC -A coalition of leading women's health care advocates called today for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) to revise their Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services (Directives) and end their ban on voluntary female sterilization at Catholic and Catholic-affiliated hospitals. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Fifteen organizations, including women's health, rights, and research groups, cited a review of 150 hospital mergers in the past decade that has identified at least 40 non-Catholic hospitals that had merged with Catholic hospitals and now face having to comply with the Directives and stop providing female sterilization to thousands of women, many of them poor. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Responding to pressure from the Vatican, the bishops had voted to revise the Directives in June 2001, putting sterilization on par with abortion and euthanasia as an "intrinsically immoral" service and banning the procedure at all Catholic and Catholic-affiliated hospitals. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Non-Catholic hospitals across the country are now struggling to find ways to avoid complying with the Directives and to continue to provide tubal ligation, a service that is one of the most affordable and safest methods of contraception. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • As organizations dedicated to the health and well-being of women, we respectfully ask the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops to reconsider its June 2001 decision to revise the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services (" Directives ") as they relate to the provision of sterilization for women. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • The revised Directives strictly limit the ability of non-Catholic hospitals that have merged with Catholic hospitals to provide voluntary female sterilization. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • A review by Catholics for a Free Choice of the approximately 150 hospital mergers in the past decade has identified 40 such situations in which sterilization services were preserved but are now jeopardized by the revised Directives . (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • It turned out the college had outsourced its student health services to a Catholic health agency - and like other Catholic health institutions, it follows religious directives that prohibit contraception to prevent pregnancy. (upr.org)
  • Issued by the U.S. Council of Catholic Bishops, the Ethical and Religious Directives that guide Catholic health care systems "prohibit a broad swath of reproductive care," including birth control pills, IUDs, tubal ligation and vasectomies, says Dr. Debra Stulberg , a professor of family medicine at the University of Chicago who has researched how these directives play out in health care. (upr.org)
  • And these days, the directives apply to a wide range of settings where people seek reproductive health care - including urgent care centers, doctors' offices and outpatient surgery centers that have been bought by or merged with Catholic health systems. (upr.org)
  • Bon Secours told the local Chronicle-Telegram that it would only offer birth control prescriptions for medical reasons - an exception allowed under the religious directives. (upr.org)
  • These services are widely available at secular hospitals but generally forbidden, along with abortion, at Catholic facilities under the Ethical and Religious Directives set by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • U.S. bishops have made clear that they cannot in good conscience comply with these directives, and should the mandates go into effect in a year, many hospitals, which cater to many non-Catholics as well as Catholics, would be forced to shutter themselves. (sffoghorn.com)
  • The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops expects hospitals affiliated with the Catholic Church to abide by the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • These directives interpret medical care based on the church's moral teachings and limit aspects of reproductive and end-of-life-care. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • At the same time, some Catholic hospitals that openly cite the directives may actually provide restricted services using workarounds. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • Meeting in Orlando for their spring meeting, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops overwhelmingly decided via a voice vote to begin a process of revising the Ethical and Religious Directives, guidelines that draw from theology and church teaching and regulate the roughly 2,200 Catholic hospitals and health care facilities in the United States. (americamagazine.org)
  • Some bishops said that the drafting committee should look at the legal impact of any revisions, particularly at how federal health care guidelines could impact Catholic hospitals, while others, including Bishop Michael Olson, who heads the Diocese of Fort Worth and who serves on the doctrine committee, said that a broader pastoral document about gender dysphoria could be helpful after the directives are updated. (americamagazine.org)
  • The hospital took the action to comply with the church's Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services, which prohibit sterilization procedures except in very narrow circumstances. (latimes.com)
  • The Ethical and Religious Directives forbid a host of procedures associated with women's reproductive rights, treatments for transgender patients and end-of-life care. (latimes.com)
  • Not all Dignity institutions are designated as "Catholic hospitals" subject to the directives, but its so-called non-Catholic hospitals are subject to the slightly less restrictive Statement of Common Values, which also bars abortions. (latimes.com)
  • The University of California regents are wrestling with a question that should have an easy answer: Should they approve an "affiliation" between UC San Francisco, one of the leading teaching hospitals in America, and Dignity Health, a Catholic hospital chain that openly discriminates against women and LGBTQ patients and requires its doctors to comply with religious directives, some of which run counter to medical science and ethical practice? (latimes.com)
  • The law changed in 1967 to include abortions in the case of rape, incest or if a woman's mental health were in danger. (ktvu.com)
  • Two recent studies on health professionals' attitudes towards abortion describes their struggle to balance religiously- and morally-based opposition to abortion against their professional duty to provide abortions and their concern for the women, and a national survey of physicians working in Ethiopian public hospitals showed that the respondents often experienced dilemmas related to reproductive health issues. (packard.org)
  • Plans aren't required to cover drugs to induce abortions and services for male reproductive capacity, like vasectomies. (healthcare.gov)
  • As such, States parties should legalize abortion at least in cases of rape, incest, threats to the life and/or health of the mother, or severe foetal impairment, as well as provide women with access to quality post-abortion care, especially in cases of complications resulting from unsafe abortions. (hhrjournal.org)
  • In Seattle, a merger with religiously affiliated Providence Hospital led secular Swedish Hospital to stop providing elective abortions. (aclu-wa.org)
  • As a result, Catholic hospitals do not offer elective abortions. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • In this stage, a form was used to collect data about the women and the abortions in the medical records, and 82 interviews with health professionals were conducted. (scielo.br)
  • According to the health professionals, the main difficulties faced in the services are the low availability of physicians to perform abortions and the insufficient training of the staff. (scielo.br)
  • They may realize that a Catholic hospital might not provide abortions, but many do not realize that preventative services like contraceptives and tubal ligations are also restricted. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • The main factor for the occurrence of abortion was not having live births, indicating a tendency of abortions to occur in the early reproductive life. (bvsalud.org)
  • Brazilian medical care arises from non-informed induced studies indicate difficulties in assessing accurately abortions, either incomplete or with complications. (bvsalud.org)
  • Indeed, substantial differences arose, or so it appeared, complicated not only by different exigencies in national settings but also reflecting differing perspectives, specifically, those held primarily by health professionals compared to those held by advocates who felt they spoke for women needing abortions. (bvsalud.org)
  • As part of the sale, Methodist was set to pick up the physician practices associated with both Tenet hospitals, six MedPost urgent care centers and all but one surgery center. (healthcaredive.com)
  • Catholic systems are taking over many physician practices, urgent care centers, ambulatory care centers, and patients seeking contraception won't be able to get it if their physician is now part of that system. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • Brown signed Oregon's Reproductive Health Equity Act into law in 2017 - a first of its kind bill that expanded access to reproductive health services for all Oregonians and codified the right to an abortion into state law. (ktvu.com)
  • Using the RAMOS methodology, all possible deaths among women of reproductive age using multiple sources to identify the cause of death were identified and then which of those decedents died during pregnancy or in the year after pregnancy were determined. (who.int)
  • The mission focused on healthcare education, and families were educated about sanitation practices, reproductive choice, and household budgeting. (wikipedia.org)
  • The case has sparked widespread debate about patient autonomy and the responsibility of healthcare providers in ensuring ethical practices. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • On the provider side, this case forces hospitals to evaluate their policies and practices regarding LGBTQ+ individuals' rights and needs. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • Coalition will be built with mass media for providing health education to the population on a continuing basis regarding methods of preventing communicable and non-communicable diseases, caring practices for children, adolescents and the old aged, and creating awareness on nutrition and proper sanitation. (who.int)
  • In recent years, the prevalence of FGM practices has been slowly decreasing due to increased awareness about the serious health complications it causes. (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • NaPro Technology Natural Procreative Technology represents today's definitive Catholic answer to mainstream human reproductive medical procedures, practices, and paradigms. (catholicculture.org)
  • Medical and surgical practices of NaPro Technology effectively treat a wide range of women's health issues including, but not limited to, infertility, repetitive miscarriages, pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS), post-partum depression, and more. (catholicculture.org)
  • All these phenomena/features have gained visibility in social studies of health-related knowledge, practices and policies in anthropology and beyond. (cnrs.fr)
  • The proposal created a furor among UCSF professionals, who questioned whether a public institution could morally or legally collaborate with a hospital chain that openly practices discrimination. (latimes.com)
  • They appealed to the bishops' to adhere to their position on providing equitable health care for all, particularly low-income people who cannot afford health insurance. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Noting that the vast majority of Catholics reject the dictates of the US bishops on matters related to reproductive healthcare, O'Brien laid the blame for the attempts to restrict access to family planning at the doorstep of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and their lobbying efforts. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • The U.S. bishops voted on Friday to begin a process that could lead to rules formally banning Catholic hospitals from offering medical procedures and therapies sometimes collectively described as gender-affirming care. (americamagazine.org)
  • While most Catholic hospitals already refrain from offering transgender surgeries and hormonal interventions, the vote means that the bishops will move to formalize such bans by incorporating guidance from a document released by the U.S.C.C.B.'s doctrine committee in March. (americamagazine.org)
  • While most Catholic hospitals already refrain from offering transgender surgeries and hormonal interventions, the vote means that the bishops will move to formalize such bans. (americamagazine.org)
  • It was the Catholic Church, more specifically the U.S. Catholic bishops' conference, that largely engineered Hobby Lobby to block the legitimization of contraception as a standard health insurance benefit-a last ditch effort to prevent by law what it couldn't prevent from the pulpit: women from using birth control. (salon.com)
  • The Catholic bishops' interest in "conscience clauses" that would allow employers to opt out of reproductive health care services began in earnest in the late 1990s, with the increased viability at the state and national levels of contraceptive equity measures designed to ensure that health plans covered prescription contraceptives like the Pill just like other prescription medications. (salon.com)
  • The bishops and social conservatives worked furiously to derail the measure by claiming that it would force health plans to cover abortifacients-which they now defined as anything that worked post-fertilization. (salon.com)
  • When charges that contraceptives were abortifacients failed to halt the measure, the bishops turned to a new tack: claiming that contraception equity laws violated the religious freedom of insurers and employers who disapproved of contraception and would be forced to subsidize its use. (salon.com)
  • According to court documents filed Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023, the American Civil Liberties Union and attorneys representing Tennessee transgender teens and their families have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to block a ban on gender-affirming care for minors that a lower court allowed to go into effect. (fox8.com)
  • Since the initial Healthy Brain Initiative (HBI) Road Map release in 2007, the Road Map has undergone two new iterations, with the most recent version, The HBI's State and Local Public Health Partnerships to Address Dementia: The 2018-2023 Road Map, released in late 2018. (cdc.gov)
  • Newsom also recently signed legislation eliminating copays for abortion care services and has signed into law a legislative package to further strengthen access and protect patients and providers. (ktvu.com)
  • Earlier this year, Inslee signed the Affirm Washington Abortion Access Act that better ensures the ability of Washington abortion care providers to serve any person who comes in Washington state seeking an abortion. (ktvu.com)
  • EngenderHealth will work with a volunteer network of young and feminist professionals committed to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) to design and implement a digital-based awareness, advocacy, and communication campaign to nurture gender-sensitive, youth-friendly, and inclusive safe abortion care behavior among health professionals. (packard.org)
  • Rep. Pitts was the sponsor of HR 358, a recently passed bill that gave unprecedented exemption rights to hospitals, allowing them to refuse to provide abortion care, even when necessary to save a pregnant woman's life. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Since healthcare access is a union issue, it is incumbent upon unions to protect their members' rights to access family planning services and abortion care. (dissentmagazine.org)
  • The number of Catholic acute-care hospitals has been increasing rapidly, threatening women's access to reproductive health care, according to a report released by the American Civil Liberties Union and The MergerWatch Project. (aclu.org)
  • In 2011, one in ten acute-care hospitals were Catholic-sponsored or -affiliated. (aclu.org)
  • Lois Utley, a specialist in tracking hospital mergers, said her organization, Community Catalyst, has identified more than 20 municipalities in blue or purple states where the only acute care hospitals are Catholic. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • Centers' and 'Hospitals' in all 18 townships of the province. (who.int)
  • The ACLU has brought an action under the Freedom of Information Act against the federal Centers for Medicaid & Medicare Services (CMS) seeking complaints against Catholic hospitals for denial of emergency medical treatment. (typepad.com)
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is issuing this Health Alert Network (HAN) Health Advisory to advise clinicians and health departments to consider the possibility of illness due to lead exposure and report cases to their local health authorities. (cdc.gov)
  • In 2018, Inslee signed the Reproductive Parity Act that requires all health plans that include maternity care services to also cover abortion and contraception. (ktvu.com)
  • Meienberg instructed women running the kindergarten to explain the basics of healthcare and provided minimal health services for malarial, fever, and antibiotic ailments. (wikipedia.org)
  • The amount you pay for covered health care services before your insurance plan starts to pay. (healthcare.gov)
  • If you work for an exempt religious employer and use contraceptive services, you may have to pay for them out-of-pocket. (healthcare.gov)
  • If your health plan is sponsored or arranged by this type of organization, an insurer or third party administrator will make separate payments for contraceptive services that you use. (healthcare.gov)
  • You'll have access to contraceptive services without a copayment, coinsurance, or deductible when they are provided by an in-network provider. (healthcare.gov)
  • Health Insurance Marketplace ® is a registered trademark of the Department of Health & Human Services. (healthcare.gov)
  • We evaluated how training at a Catholic hospital affects trainees' subsequent provision of reproductive health services at secular institutions. (allenpress.com)
  • In January, the US Secretary of Health and Human Services proposed a new rule that would allow hospitals, doctors, and other individuals and institutions to deny care to patients based on religious beliefs. (hhrjournal.org)
  • And one result of these mergers is of great concern to civil libertarians: The restriction of health care services based on religious doctrine. (aclu-wa.org)
  • A hospital's religious affiliation may impact patients' access to important health care services. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Ensuring comprehensive health care services in the community is part of attracting and retaining the best workers. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Just as they want good schools for their children in the community, employees want access to all lawful health services in the community, and shouldn't have to travel outside of the community to obtain needed care. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Employers should seek full disclosure about which services health care providers do and do not provide and should make this information available to employees. (aclu-wa.org)
  • The FTC alleges the deal will raise healthcare prices, reduce care quality and diminish the incentive to expand services and invest in technology. (healthcaredive.com)
  • We can also confirm that several of these hospitals, like Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital in Grass Valley, CA, are the only hospitals providing sterilization services for women in the area. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • As fighting has continued across the country, an increasing number of health facilities have been heavily damaged or destroyed by attacks, leaving thousands of Syrians without access to urgent and essential healthcare services 5 . (cdc.gov)
  • Last week, students returning to campus at Oberlin College in Ohio got a shock: A local news outlet reported that the campus' student health services would severely limit who could get contraception prescriptions. (upr.org)
  • Although the college quickly came up with a new plan to offer reproductive health services to students on campus, the incident at Oberlin shows the wide reach of Catholic health care in the U.S., and how the rules these institutions follow can limit access to contraception. (upr.org)
  • They can also apply when Catholic health agencies are hired to manage health care services for other institutions, which is what happened at Oberlin. (upr.org)
  • In a campus bulletin posted on Tuesday, Oberlin's president, Carmen Twillie Ambar, said Oberlin had only recently learned that these restrictions would be enforced by Bon Secours, the large Catholic health system whose subsidiary was hired to run the college's health services. (upr.org)
  • Carmen Twillie Ambar, president of Oberlin College, said Oberlin had only recently learned that contraception restrictions would be enforced by the Catholic health system whose subsidiary was hired to run the college's health services. (upr.org)
  • During the hearing Jon O'Brien affirmed that if refusal clauses are enacted, such restrictions would "go far beyond their intent of protecting conscience rights for all by eliminating access to essential healthcare for many, if not most patients, especially in the area of reproductive healthcare services" making it "harder for many working Americans to get the healthcare they need at a cost they can afford. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • In August 2011, the Obama administration formally accepted the recommendation of an Institute of Medicine expert panel that contraceptive counseling and methods be included in a select set of women's preventive health services that, under the Affordable Care Act, automatically would be covered in most private insurance plans without additional cost-sharing beginning in August 2012. (guttmacher.org)
  • The administration's accommodation is a tacit effort to adapt to the insurance coverage context a central element of ethical principles long endorsed by a broad range of professional medical associations, which require a balance between health care providers' religious or moral objections to providing certain medical services and patients' rights to be informed about and receive those services. (guttmacher.org)
  • The differing perspectives on these services can clash when a Catholic hospital system seeks to acquire or merge with a non-sectarian hospital, as is happening now in northeastern Connecticut. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • According to the Catholic Health Association , there are 654 Catholic hospitals in the U.S., including 299 with obstetric services. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • The CHA's president, Sister Mary Haddad, said the Catholic hospitals provide a wide range of prenatal, obstetric and postnatal services while assisting in about 500,000 births annually. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • Oregon legislators created the merger review program in 2021, in part, because they feared the expansion of faith-based systems would curtail reproductive services. (thelundreport.org)
  • But Adventist said it would not require Mid-Columbia to change any of its current reproductive or other services. (thelundreport.org)
  • No patient should be at the mercy of what large health systems deem are worthwhile services. (thelundreport.org)
  • Residents in The Dalles area need "the opportunity to understand the impact this transaction could have on their access to essential health services," she said. (thelundreport.org)
  • For example, reproductive rights activists say direct abortion services were discontinued last year at the Hoag Memorial Presbyterian Hospital in Southern California a few months after it merged with St. Joseph Health System. (fsrn.org)
  • But Kathryn Austin Scott with the California Hospital Association says letting the Attorney General deny mergers based on concerns over denied services could invite legal challenges, which could financially damage hospitals chains. (fsrn.org)
  • Toward the end of January, the Obama Administration through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services mandated that all employers must cover the costs of contraceptives and birth control procedures as part of the nation's health-care overhaul plan. (sffoghorn.com)
  • Yet the directive by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services would force Catholic health care providers to cover many of these things. (sffoghorn.com)
  • While the new rule would allow exemptions for some religious organizations, most Catholic services as they are currently structured would fail to be exempt from the mandate simply because most of their institutions, such as hospitals and universities, employ, as well as provide health services to, significant numbers of non-Catholics. (sffoghorn.com)
  • it means they will lose access to much government support, which many health services-not just Catholic ones-are at least partly reliant on for their operations. (sffoghorn.com)
  • Although the Brazilian legislation authorized the voluntary interruption of rape-related pregnancy in the 1940s, access to health services remained unregulated for almost 50 years. (scielo.br)
  • This means that many patients may waste their time at Catholic facilities when they encounter restrictions to common health services," she said. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • Websites provide an opportunity to inform consumers about which services are provided and which ones are restricted and can thereby avoid conflicts in care. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • Yet in Washington state religious health systems, and even public hospital districts, are denying Washington residents access to important health care services. (aclu-wa.org)
  • The ACLU of Washington is enforcing our state laws and fighting back against the use of religion to discriminate in order to ensure Washington residents have access to reproductive, end-of-life and LGBT related health care services, referrals and information. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Though Washington state has required hospitals to post on their websites the services they offer, many have failed to provide clear information. (aclu-wa.org)
  • On December 14, the ACLU of Washington along with 18 other public interest organizations that advocate for patients' rights and comprehensive health care access sent a letter to Walgreens requesting information about its strategic collaboration for the opening of up to 25 clinics in Washington and Oregon with Providence Health & Services, a Catholic health care provider. (aclu-wa.org)
  • The ACLU-WA and 18 allies are seeking assurances that religious doctrine won't restrict consumers' access to medical services at new Walgreens's clinics. (aclu-wa.org)
  • The overall objectives of the NHP will be to (i) increase availability of user-centered quality services for a defined Essential Service Package (ESP) delivery along with other health related services, and (ii) develop a sustainable quality health service system to meet people's need. (who.int)
  • Nutrition activities will be reinforced by forging links with other activities in the health sector like community-centered immunization and hospital services for referral of the severely malnourished, etc. (who.int)
  • Catholic health care services must not perform interventions, whether surgical or chemical, that aim to transform the sexual characteristics of a human body into those of the opposite sex or take part in the development of such procedures," the document says. (americamagazine.org)
  • It was a framework that conservatives had successfully applied to abortion-asserting that it must be segregated from other health services and government funding because it was immoral-and now were trying to apply to birth control. (salon.com)
  • It was a stunning claim, suggesting that anyone who administered or paid for an insurance policy should be free to dictate what coverage was provided to policyholders based on their objection to services that they themselves would not be forced to use. (salon.com)
  • Roe benefited the state, undercutting more radical demands for free health care, pre-natal services, and control of the burgeoning abortion business, and cementing a dependency between liberal feminist organizations, the court system, and the illusory left wing of the Democratic Party. (theanarchistlibrary.org)
  • Plan benefits include substantial coverage of physician and inpatient hospital services. (bricker.com)
  • The health-specific strategies which were brought forward in the Yemeni discussions on population, health and development, range from a narrow focus on facility-based maternal health services to broader concepts of reproductive health services. (yementimes.com)
  • The National Population Strategy endorsed in 1991 aimed both at reducing maternal mortality and morbidity and at lowering fertility rates and therefore focused on the provision of maternal health services and in particular on family planning services. (yementimes.com)
  • The Population Action Plan of 1991 intended to expand preventive and curative maternal health services to rural areas. (yementimes.com)
  • Family Planning services were to be improved by expanding the health infrastructure, training health personnel, especially midwives, and involving the private sector (ibid,: 35). (yementimes.com)
  • Dignity asserted in a statement issued after the ruling that "our services are available to everyone without discrimination and all are welcome at our care sites. (latimes.com)
  • Health system weaknesses, poor health and cancer literacy, as well as social, cultural, economic and gender-based barriers that are prevalent in the African Region have resulted in increased vulnerability and poor access to cervical cancer prevention and control services for women and girls in Africa. (who.int)
  • Services are available free of charge or heavily subsidized in many public and private health facilities, yet many women may still not use them due to social, cultural, financial or health care services constraints. (who.int)
  • At the conference "Developing an Advocacy Agenda for Abortion in the 21st Century and Making Change Happen" held on 5-7 September 2018, Lisbon, Portugal, organized by the International Campaign for Women's Right to Safe Abortion, it was argued that abortion services not only need to be treated as a bona fide form of health care but also completely reconceptualized, particularly because of the influence of medical abortion pills. (bvsalud.org)
  • In the course of these discussions, questions emerged on how much women should be able to do on their own, whether and why services were necessary in every case, where services should be located, what they should offer, who should provide them, and who should be in charge of the process. (bvsalud.org)
  • Conclusion: Midwives had positive perceptions and positive attitudes towards the PMTCT of HIV services that they were providing to antenatal attendees. (bvsalud.org)
  • Contribution: Decentralisation of PMTCT of HIV services to community-based health facilities is appropriate to enable sub-district health facilities to test for HIV and provide counselling services to pregnant women. (bvsalud.org)
  • You may have heard that there's a new Conscience and Religious Freedom Division in the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights. (medscape.com)
  • Some healthcare professionals say that if a physician refuses to perform a procedure or service because they have a CO, some patients may not even know what services they are entitled to and won't get the treatment or procedures that they need. (medscape.com)
  • Care providers may even be barred from offering referrals or discussing issues like contraception. (vox.com)
  • The first report of the Trump administration garnered headlines because it stripped all references to reproductive rights, eliminating a section that had previously reviewed access to contraception and abortion, as well as maternal mortality ratios, for every country. (hhrjournal.org)
  • They would only be given to treat health problems - not for the purpose of preventing pregnancy - and emergency contraception would only be available to victims of sexual assault. (upr.org)
  • In his testimony, Jon O'Brien showed how Catholics support the recently enacted healthcare reforms and the recommendation that contraception be included in fully covered benefits for all American employees. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • These interest groups continue to insist that an employer's religious objection to contraception (including that of an individual business owner) should receive absolute deference, notwithstanding the conscience rights, health care needs or even legal entitlements of their employees. (guttmacher.org)
  • But Nicole Evans with the California Association of Health Plans says the Mitchell bill would limit an employer's ability to keep premiums low "by negotiating coverage for certain brands of contraception and instead it would require coverage for all brands of contraceptives. (fsrn.org)
  • It's terrifying that the right to contraception could be on the federal chopping block, especially when limiting access to contraceptive care would likely result in more unwanted pregnancies - and even if contraception remains a federally protected right, no one should have to rely on unregulated online pharmacies to get their hands on the care they need. (futurism.com)
  • At the service level, low family planning promotion from health care providers (especially during antenatal care visits) along with provider bias for certain types of contraception, have contributed to inaccurate information and misconceptions. (who.int)
  • They want to turn back the clock to a time when women had no right to make decisions about their own bodies, when women had to seek care in the shadows and at great danger, when women were not treated as equal citizens under the law. (ktvu.com)
  • Newsom has proposed a $125 million Reproductive Health Package to expand access for women and help prepare for the influx of women seeking reproductive health care from other states. (ktvu.com)
  • Plans in the Health Insurance Marketplace ® must cover contraceptive methods and counseling for all women, as prescribed by a health care provider. (healthcare.gov)
  • This regulation overturns a procedure from Former President Obama's Affordable Care Act that currently allows millions of women to access contraceptives for free through their employer-sponsored health insurance, according to ABC News . (bust.com)
  • The main objective of this study was to investigate the causes of deaths among the identified maternal deaths at the community level using the RAMOS in all households in which a women of reproductive age died and to determine all direct, indirect, late and pregnancy related maternal mortality in the West Azerbaijan Province of Iran during one year (March 2013 to March 2014). (who.int)
  • The ACLU complaint describes instances where women seeking treatment for miscarriages were turned away from emergency rooms at Catholic hospitals. (typepad.com)
  • Surely a pastoral exception can be made to allow non-Catholic hospitals in partnership with Catholic hospitals to provide a health care service that is so needed and vital, especially for low-income women. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Such a exception would also allow the millions of Catholic and non-Catholic women who choose sterilization each year to exercise their freedom of conscience at the hospital of their choice, in their community. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • As a result, thousands of women, most of them poor, will be deprived of an essential health service option. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • After all this consolidation, this is where it shakes out, where we've got about 40% of reproductive age women living in areas with high or dominant Catholic hospital market share," says Marian Jarlenski, a health policy researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, who examined the data in 2020 . (upr.org)
  • Another in the package of bills, SR 55, would issue a resolution that affirms the rights of women to control their reproductive health care choices in the wake of the Hobby Lobby decision. (fsrn.org)
  • Nourbese Flint is with Black Women for Wellness, a Los Angeles-based healthcare advocacy group. (fsrn.org)
  • Brianna Pittman with Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California says women can lose reproductive choices when religious groups merge with or administer non-profit hospitals. (fsrn.org)
  • And as per the Vice report, roughly 19 million American women currently live in contraceptive deserts, or regions where access to contraceptive and reproductive healthcare is untenably sparse. (futurism.com)
  • The goal is sustainable improvement in health, nutrition and family welfare status of the people, particularly of the poor and vulnerable groups, including women, children and elderly with ultimate aim of their economic and social emancipation and physical and mental well being. (who.int)
  • Our teams provide information to the local community about the health risks associated with the practice and train healthcare professionals how to care for pregnant women who have been mutilated as children. (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • Our teams remain committed to providing healthcare for women and girls in Afar and advocating for an end to FGM in the region. (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • If you are passionate about providing women around the world with reproductive health and strengthening reproductive rights, support our work by donating today. (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • Two randomised controlled trials to investigate whether misoprostol is effective for cervical ripening in non-pregnant women were conducted between 2006 and 2009 at Ullevål University hospital, Oslo, Norway. (fiapac.org)
  • This trial was the first to allocate women referred to hysteroscopy according to their menopausal status and therefore provided a conclusion that was not subject to sub-group nor post-hoc analysis. (fiapac.org)
  • In the second trial, one thousand micrograms of self-administered vaginal misoprostol taken 12 hours before day-care operative hysteroscopy results in significant cervical ripening in postmenopausal women, compared with placebo, after 14 days pre-treatment with vaginal estradiol tablets. (fiapac.org)
  • Nearly four decades after his controversial encyclical appeared, the wisdom of Pope Paul's words and the fruits of his legacy are on full display, embodied in a new science of health care for women that is gaining converts in the United States and around the world. (catholicculture.org)
  • Women's right to abortion on demand must be part of a strategy to transform society through a militant mass movement that is directly democratic and empowers all women, a movement that can independently guarantee women's reproductive freedom. (theanarchistlibrary.org)
  • Further, the marked decrease in the number of obstetrics-gynecological residency programs offering training in abortion procedures, and public hospitals unwilling to provide the service due to political expediency, illustrates that Roe, like much of the civil rights legislation of the 1960s, set up symbolic rights, neglecting the entrenched social and economic inequalities that made Roe a hollow victory for many women. (theanarchistlibrary.org)
  • The policy making process which took place between 1991 and 1996 illustrates that a political consensus on the definition of women's health and the strategies needed to improve the health status of Yemeni women could not be achieved. (yementimes.com)
  • As mentioned above, the improvement of the social, economical and health status of Yemeni women was central to the National Population Strategy endorsed by the government in 1991. (yementimes.com)
  • In the National Health Conference of 1994 and the document issued thereafter, the limited participation of women in health, social and economic development was described as an important factor influencing negatively their health status. (yementimes.com)
  • Today, I'd like to talk about the issue I spend the majority of my time thinking about: the health of women and children around the globe. (who.int)
  • More than 40% of all women will end a pregnancy by abortion at some time in their reproductive lives. (medscape.com)
  • Each year in the United States, almost 3% of all reproductive-aged women terminate their pregnancies. (medscape.com)
  • The objective of this regional framework is to contribute to the global goal of accelerating the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem by reducing the age-adjusted incidence rate of cervical cancer to less than 4 per 100 000 women by implementing interventions to reach the vaccination, screening and treatment targets set for 2030. (who.int)
  • The biggest discussion was over the extent to which women can safely self-manage use of medical abortion pills for abortion in both the first and second trimester, and to what extent health professional control should be relinquished. (bvsalud.org)
  • A new analysis published in the American College of Nurse-Midwives' peer-reviewed journal reveals that women are not only choosing midwife-led, out-of-hospital births at an increasing rate in the United States, but also that the pace at which women are choosing this option appears to be accelerating. (cdc.gov)
  • The study population consisted of women of reproductive age, from 15 to 49 years old. (bvsalud.org)
  • Women of reproductive age in rural Sierra Leone's Western area were asked to participate in a survey to determine their attitudes and knowledge toward family planning and the use of contraceptives. (bvsalud.org)
  • You can make an impact in the fight for reproductive freedom. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • The fight for the right to abortion is part of a greater fight for reproductive and healthcare justice, which also includes the fight for single-payer healthcare, universal child care, a living wage, and affordable housing. (dissentmagazine.org)
  • Those most effected by the anti-abortion movement in Ethiopia are the most vulnerable in society, and therefore, maintaining and working towards destigmatized, safe, and accessible reproductive health care is critical. (packard.org)
  • Since this news, I have been grieving with many others across the country for the loss of accessible reproductive care and the beginning of an unknown, bleak future. (dailyutahchronicle.com)
  • The graduate certificate in Health and Hospital Law is designed for professionals seeking to enhance their knowledge of legal, regulatory, and ethical issues related to the delivery of healthcare. (shu.edu)
  • Roughly one in six hospital beds are in a Catholic facility, with the top four U.S. Catholic health systems expected to take in more $90 billion from Medicare and Medicaid in 2016, according to the ACLU's 10-page lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. (typepad.com)
  • The lawsuit was brought by Evan Minton, whose hysterectomy was abruptly canceled by Dignity's Mercy San Juan Medical Center of Carmichael, Calif., in 2016 when hospital officials learned he was transgender. (latimes.com)
  • Minton had experienced what's known as "religious refusal," a growing - and divisive - phenomenon in which health care is denied on the basis of religious beliefs. (vox.com)
  • This gives objectors virtually unfettered discretion to couch any refusal in moral or religious terms. (hhrjournal.org)
  • He noted, "I firmly believe the requirements under the Affordable Care Act, and the slate of regulations being created to implement it, infringe on no one's conscience, demand no one change her or his religious beliefs, discriminate against no man or woman, put no additional economic burden on the poor, interfere with no one's medical decisions, compromise no one's health-that is, if you consider the law without refusal clauses. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • When burdened by refusal clauses, the new health law absolutely threatens the conscience rights of every patient seeking family planning and of every provider who wishes to provide comprehensive care to their patients. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • At face value, online pharmacies offer a way to counter the issues of physical distance, over-reaching contraceptive regulation, and individual or corporate refusal to provide or cover contraceptive care. (futurism.com)
  • At its core, this legal battle focuses on the refusal by Dignity Health to provide necessary care to a transgender patient based on religious beliefs. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • We must begin by reinvigorating feminism with a refusal to negotiate women's reproductive and sexual freedoms. (theanarchistlibrary.org)
  • Paired with a presidential administration that is actively working to protect faith-based exemptions to anti-discrimination laws , it's changing the landscape of health care in America. (vox.com)
  • Catholic hospitals have long been a mainstay of health care in America. (upr.org)
  • Oregon also invested $15 million for community-based organizations to expand access to abortion across the state and provide immediate support to patients, health care providers, and community advocates, with a focus on rural communities, communities of color, and low-income communities to overcome barriers to access. (ktvu.com)
  • The target audience includes hospital administrators and compliance officers, physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals, state and federal regulators, and patient advocates. (shu.edu)
  • Meanwhile, reproductive rights advocates in California are supporting a package of bills in the state legislature would, among other things, require health plans to cover all FDA-approved contraceptive methods. (fsrn.org)
  • Advocates for trans kids argue that having access to puberty blockers and hormone therapy is safe, necessary health care backed by every major medical group. (fox8.com)
  • At the same time, the proposed rule does not define key terms like "religious beliefs," "moral convictions," or "moral or religious grounds. (hhrjournal.org)
  • 65% think that if a Catholic hospital receives any government funding, it should not be allowed to use "religious beliefs" as a reason refuse to provide procedures or medications. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • These codes embody certain principles and specify rules and obligations that are especially helpful when conflicts of values arise, such as conflicts between the provider's beliefs and patients' autonomy and access to care. (guttmacher.org)
  • In essence, professional medical standards typically endorse a provider's right to step away, or "withdraw" from providing a health care service that violates his or her moral or religious beliefs, but not in a way that blocks or denies patients' own right to care. (guttmacher.org)
  • This raises fundamental questions about the balance between personal beliefs and professional obligations within the healthcare system. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • It calls into question whether religious beliefs can be used as a justification for denying care or if there should be clear guidelines outlining when providers can refuse certain treatments based on conscience objections. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • This amendment was established in order protect religious groups from being punished by the government for not participating in laws that would force members of a religion to breach their beliefs. (sffoghorn.com)
  • regardless of the provider's conscientious objection or long-standing religious beliefs against such coverage," wrote Cathy Deeds of the NCCB. (salon.com)
  • Catholic Church schools are not obliged to provide sex education, and when provided in any church or State school such education is often filtered through the religious beliefs of teachers. (humanists.international)
  • Even though some of us have beliefs in our personal lives that will prevent us from getting an abortion under most circumstances, we believe that reproductive healthcare decisions, like all healthcare decisions, should be made between patients and their doctors without interference from the government or any other outside force. (dissentmagazine.org)
  • The Seventh-day Adventist Church opposes abortion in all but a few instances, such as health-threatening pregnancies and rape or incest, and it opposes same-sex relationships. (thelundreport.org)
  • Moreover, restricting abortion harms mental health and increases the risk of domestic abuse among those with unwanted pregnancies. (dailyutahchronicle.com)
  • Lawmakers could help people who have unwanted pregnancies by providing paid parental leave or greater access to Medicaid . (dailyutahchronicle.com)
  • With the rise of Catholic hospitals has come the increasing danger that women's reproductive health care will be compromised by religious restrictions. (aclu.org)
  • The report includes recommendations about how to ensure Catholic restrictions do not interfere with patients' rights and to protect access to comprehensive reproductive health care. (aclu.org)
  • For employers, concerns about religious restrictions are far from academic. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Patients often aren't aware that these restrictions might affect the care they get, says Lois Uttley, a senior advisor with the health advocacy group Community Catalyst. (upr.org)
  • More state-level restrictions on reproductive health were enacted between 2011-2013, than were passed in the previous decade. (fsrn.org)
  • In a survey of Catholic hospitals throughout the country, researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus found many did not advertise their religious affiliation and the majority did not explain how that affiliation results in health care restrictions. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • Guiahi said hospitals may avoid transparency about restrictions to avoid losing patients. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • It has held COVID-19 at bay for so long but with rising infections, understandable fatigue with social restrictions, low levels of immunity among the population and a fragile health system it's vital that it receives more vaccines as soon as possible. (bvs.br)
  • One notable phenomenon is a spate of mergers, often involving religious health care corporations taking control of secular health institutions. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Plus, while Mid-Columbia is a secular, non-religious institution, Adventist is a faith-based system affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church. (thelundreport.org)
  • Minton, who was unavailable for comment, felt he'd been denied care on the basis of his gender identity, making it a civil rights issue , and in September, a court agreed to let him continue a lawsuit against Dignity Health, which operated the hospital where he was denied care. (vox.com)
  • Dignity Health, which has since merged with Catholic Health Initiatives to form CommonSpirit Health, told the Los Angeles Times that its hospitals "do not perform sterilizing procedures such as hysterectomies for any patient regardless of their gender identity, unless there is a serious threat to the life or health of the patient. (vox.com)
  • The healthcare industry is no stranger to legal battles, but a recent case between Negin Behazin and Dignity Health has been capturing the attention of professionals and patients alike. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • In this blog post, we will delve into the details of the Negin Behazin vs. Dignity Health case, explore its significance, and discuss what it could mean for the future of healthcare ethics. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • In the case of Negin Behazin vs. Dignity Health, a young woman named Negin Behazin sued the prominent healthcare organization for alleged medical negligence and violation of her rights. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • The case of Negin Behazin vs. Dignity Health highlights the importance of upholding these principles in medical institutions. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • If Negin Behazin prevails in her lawsuit against Dignity Health, it could lead to significant changes in how hospitals operate moving forward. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • Stating that California's interest in fighting discrimination against LGBTQ residents outweighs the right to impose religious standards on healthcare, an appeals court has reinstated a lawsuit against the Catholic hospital chain Dignity Health for barring a hysterectomy for a transgender patient. (latimes.com)
  • Moreover, they often restrict even the ability of hospital staff to provide patients with full information and referrals for care that conflict with religious teachings. (aclu.org)
  • As a result, there has been a strong backlash from the Catholic Church, stating that the mandate forces the Church to violate central religious teachings about human sexuality. (sffoghorn.com)
  • In California, Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener is among those warily monitoring the proliferation of Catholic health care providers, who operate 52 hospitals in his state. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • Brace yourself for a thought-provoking journey that may forever change the way hospitals operate! (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • The health care market in Washington looks very different today than it did a few years ago, and the pace of change will only accelerate as the Affordable Care Act - aka Obamacare - is implemented. (aclu-wa.org)
  • One of the bills, SB 1053, would mandate that all birth control methods covered under the Affordable Care Act - which guarantees access to all federally-approved birth control methods without copayments, delays, or denials - would be protected in California. (fsrn.org)
  • Supporters of the bill say insurers receiving payments under the Affordable Care Act would have to provide patients with any FDA-approved birth control method, or risk being excluded from participation in the federal health care program. (fsrn.org)
  • Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), applicable large employers are required to offer minimum essential coverage (that is both affordable and meets the minimum value standard) to at least 95 percent of their eligible full-time equivalent employees. (bricker.com)
  • Maryam Guiahi, MD, associate professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, analyzed the websites of all hospitals listed in the Catholic Health Association of the United States' Health Care Directory. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • The head of the Catholic Health Association, which represents hundreds of Catholic hospitals and other health care facilities, said that she hopes the revision process will "engage in broad consultation with patients suffering from gender dysphoria and providers who care for them to ensure the health of the whole person. (americamagazine.org)
  • Only plans provided by bona fide religious employers-defined narrowly as those that exist for the purpose of inculcating religious values and that primarily serve and employ people who share the employer's religion-would be eligible for an exemption from the coverage requirement. (guttmacher.org)
  • Doctors of the World has been active in Ethiopia since 1997, providing primary healthcare to vulnerable populations and working to eradicate female genital mutilation (FGM). (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • This course examines the law governing medical treatment of minors, with an emphasis on the tension between parental authority, the child's needs and wishes, the duty of medical professionals to provide adequate care, and the state's interest in protecting the child from harm. (shu.edu)
  • As PSBJ reported (July 3), Governor Inslee has directed the Department of Health to update the state's rules for approving hospital mergers. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Mid-Columbia and Adventist, both nonprofits, have jointly applied to the Oregon Health Authority for approval under the state's new Health Care Market Oversight program, and the state is inviting public comment through Feb. 8. (thelundreport.org)
  • The population includes all midwives between the ages of 21 and 60 years who work in antenatal care (ANC) clinics in 11 district hospitals in the Central Region of Ghana where the study was conducted. (bvsalud.org)
  • The chairman of the Subcommittee, Rep. Joseph Pitts (R-PA), called the hearing to address the question, "Do New Health Law Mandates Threaten Conscience Rights and Access to Care? (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Protecting individual conscience and ensuring access to affordable, quality care is not just an ideal, it is a basic tenet of our society and it is the right thing to do," he concluded. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • I'm not saying that healthcare professionals don't have some right of conscience. (medscape.com)
  • I'm not going to argue that individuals shouldn't try to follow their personal values, but I don't think it's right when we create a Conscience and Religious Freedom Division that doesn't capture patient values, interests, and rights along with those of providers. (medscape.com)
  • There are already so few access points to the full spectrum of reproductive and gender-affirming care for rural Oregonians," Purdy told The Lund Report. (thelundreport.org)
  • Such campaigns, in most cases, are led by religious-affiliated medical professionals. (packard.org)
  • When it comes to health care, the stakes are life and death, an issue that the California court in Minton's case recognized when identifying the need for " full and equal access to medical treatment . (vox.com)
  • But as medical facilities continue to close or merge with better-funded institutions, Christian hospitals, which may hew to religious doctrine when making treatment decisions , are becoming a lone source of care for many Americans. (vox.com)
  • The ACLU does not object to hospital mergers per se, but believes that no patient should be refused access to lawful health care because of the religious ideology of the institutions running hospitals, clinics, or other medical facilities. (aclu-wa.org)
  • CMS receives and investigates complaints of violations of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, which requires that hospitals receiving federal funds provide emergency care to stabilize a medical condition, including a miscarriage. (typepad.com)
  • These are the standards of practice of the major health care provider associations in the United States, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Pharmacists Association and the American Academy of Physician Assistants (see "Rights vs. Responsibilities: Professional Standards and Provider Refusals," August 2005). (guttmacher.org)
  • Mid-Columbia Medical Center in The Dalles is tentatively being absorbed by California-based Adventist Health. (thelundreport.org)
  • Financially strapped Mid-Columbia Medical Center in The Dalles is moving ahead with its plan to be absorbed into California-based Adventist Health, a 23-hospital chain that says it will spend $100 million over the coming 10 years upgrading Mid-Columbia. (thelundreport.org)
  • This gripping saga brings to light important questions about healthcare ethics and could have far-reaching implications for both providers and those seeking medical care. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • The ACLU of Washington believes that everyone should have access to lawful best care medical treatment. (aclu-wa.org)
  • But the eventual language is likely to come from the March document, which states unequivocally that certain medical procedures related to gender, such as hormone therapy and elective hysterectomies, cannot be offered in Catholic health care settings. (americamagazine.org)
  • Families are losing access to much-needed medical care that has allowed their children to flourish. (fox8.com)
  • Tennessee's Republican-dominant General Assembly, as well as some Democratic lawmakers, quickly advanced the ban earlier this year after Nashville's Vanderbilt University Medical Center was accused of opening its transgender health clinic because it was profitable. (fox8.com)
  • The authors, allegedly medical practitioners and religious scholars, argued that the heavy social problems Yemenis encountered were also resulting from the use of hormonal and mechanical contraceptives and encouraged early marriage in order to preserve the integrity (hasana) of the individual and the society (Shari'a Guidelines 1996: 2). (yementimes.com)
  • The issue of Dignity's adherence to the church rules blew up a plan by UC San Francisco, the university's main medical school, to affiliate with four Dignity hospitals in the Bay Area. (latimes.com)
  • Educate patients or their caregivers and guardians about the health effects of lead exposure in children and the importance of seeking medical care. (cdc.gov)
  • These medical consequences of PID are associated with great emotional stress and can have a major effect on a woman's reproductive health. (cdc.gov)
  • While this rule would have broad consequences in terms of access to care, including for LGBT people, it would also almost certainly affect access to reproductive health care . (hhrjournal.org)
  • The Post ad suggested that a pro-equality ruling would "unleash religious persecution and discrimination against people of faith," a statement that ignores the many people of faith who do support full equality for LGBT people. (pfaw.org)
  • A small but dedicated and growing cadre of Catholic health-care professionals is introducing an exciting new approach - which is both morally acceptable and remarkably successful - to the treatment of fertility problems. (catholicculture.org)
  • There is a need to provide promotional messages and encouraging mutual fertility decisions. (who.int)
  • In becoming part of Adventist, Mid-Columbia would implement Adventist's community well-being initiatives aimed at improving residents' health and reducing the length of hospital stays, the application states. (thelundreport.org)
  • There is concern that doctors governed by such bans - whether a state law or a Catholic directive - may endanger a pregnant woman's health by withholding treatment as she begins to show ill effects from a pregnancy-related problem. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • This may sound like isolated case, but according to data from the Ministry of Health every day two girls under the age of 15 give birth in Paraguay. (hhrjournal.org)
  • The national regulation of the legal abortion took place in 1999, when the Ministry of Health issued the document Prevenção e Tratamento dos Agravos Resultantes da Violência Sexual contra Mulheres e Adolescentes , which promoted and standardized the organization of theservices 4 4. (scielo.br)
  • The initial efforts of the Ministry of Health in the late 1980s got a definite impetus when the Government of Turkey ratified the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) in 2004. (who.int)
  • The Ministry of Health created a unit specifical y devoted to tobacco control for the first time in 2006, and the Tobacco and Alcohol Market Regulatory Authority (TAPDK) established its own tobacco control department two years later. (who.int)
  • As rural hospitals shutter, and faith-based care grows, "religious refusals" are leaving some patients without options. (vox.com)
  • Patients need to be able to make fully informed decisions about their health care options. (aclu-wa.org)
  • The CHA says more than one in seven U.S. hospital patients are cared for in a Catholic facility. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • Some states even allow individual doctors and pharmacies the right to refuse patients contraceptive care on religious grounds. (futurism.com)
  • Regardless of the verdict reached in this particular case, it serves as a reminder that there is still work to be done in safeguarding patients' rights within our healthcare system. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • Stay tuned as we dive deeper into why this case carries such significance and explore its potential implications for both patients seeking care and providers delivering it! (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • It has sparked an important conversation about the responsibilities hospitals have towards their patients, regardless of their gender identity or sexual orientation. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • For patients, this case is critical in ensuring that they receive equitable access to healthcare without facing discrimination or being denied treatment due to their personal characteristics. (digitaljournaluae.com)
  • Patients need to know if they are going to a Catholic hospital and if that is going to affect the care they receive," Guiahi said. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • It was surprising to find that one in five of these Catholic hospitals do not even report their identity and that the vast majority do not explain to patients what being Catholic means. (fitnessbossflorida.com)
  • The ruling could narrow the ability of Catholic hospitals in California to place limits on the healthcare it delivers to patients. (latimes.com)
  • The document describes "abortion, euthanasia, assisted suicide and direct sterilization" as "intrinsically evil" and bars administrators and employees of Catholic hospitals from assisting or even making referrals for patients seeking those procedures. (latimes.com)
  • The Trump Administration has decided that it wants to make sure that healthcare professionals, doctors, pharmacists, and nurses who have conscientious objections about doing certain things for patients get their rights protected. (medscape.com)
  • I think every healthcare professional who doesn't want to do something has an obligation, presuming the procedure or whatever it is that the patient might need is legal and allowed in the United States, to tell patients where they can go and how they can go about getting it. (medscape.com)
  • Some healthcare professionals are concerned that if a physician refuses to perform a procedure or service because they have a conscientious objection (CO), patients will have to look for another doctor, thereby delaying their treatment. (medscape.com)
  • Over time, physicians and others involved in the provision of health care have generated professional codes of ethics that define what it means to be a health care professional. (guttmacher.org)
  • Expanding the scope of health service provision to include proven alternative health care system (e.g. (who.int)
  • AP) - Attorneys representing Tennessee transgender teens and their families asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to block a ban on gender-affirming care for minors that a lower court allowed to go into effect. (fox8.com)
  • As a result, the transgender community has a higher rate of mental health problems and risk of attempted suicide. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Some non-profit religious organizations - like non-profit religious hospitals and institutions of higher education that certify they have religious objections to contraceptive coverage - don't have to contract, arrange, pay, or refer for contraceptive coverage. (healthcare.gov)
  • Health plans sponsored by certain exempt religious employers, like churches and other houses of worship, don't have to cover contraceptive methods and counseling. (healthcare.gov)
  • In February 2012, the administration relented somewhat, proposing an "accommodation" aimed at a broader set of religiously affiliated employers, such as hospitals, universities and charities. (guttmacher.org)
  • Instead, it would be provided and paid for by the employers' insurance companies, which also would solely communicate with the employees about their coverage. (guttmacher.org)
  • As Max Pringle reports from Sacramento, the bills are being debated just weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court's "Hobby Lobby" ruling, which allowed some employers to opt out of providing coverage for certain types of birth control for religious reasons. (fsrn.org)
  • Flint says given California's size and political clout, any statement of support for reproductive rights would send a strong message to employers thinking of setting up shop in the state. (fsrn.org)
  • Measures to ensure contraceptive equity had been stalled by male legislators and social conservatives who asserted that employers and insurers shouldn't be forced to pay for what they called a "lifestyle" choice, not a health care need. (salon.com)
  • They also prohibit gender-affirming care. (upr.org)
  • SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Within hours of the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade on Friday, the governors of California, Oregon and Washington promised to defend access to reproductive health care, including abortion and contraceptives. (ktvu.com)
  • The sponsors retooled the bill and reintroduced it as a measure that required insurance plans participating in the health insurance program for federal employees to cover contraceptives. (salon.com)
  • State officials are assessing a bid by Catholic-run Covenant Health to merge with Day Kimball Healthcare, an independent, financially struggling hospital and health care system based in the town of Putnam. (conseil-general-jacques-behague.com)
  • Use of FP helps to avoid unwanted in providing FP commodities such as oral pills and pregnancy, reduce maternal morbidity and mortality by intrauterine device (IUD) insertion and removal ( 5 ). (who.int)
  • The Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) is a surveillance system which collects data on current public health guidelines and topical issues concerning maternal and child health.1 Although PRAMS is primarily a paper-and-pencil self-administered survey, a subset of call-back telephone-administered questions is also planned for use. (cdc.gov)
  • We work on a variety of issues that impact people's access to comprehensive reproductive care. (catholicsforchoice.org)
  • Indeed, if all proposed mergers go through this year, nearly half of all hospital beds in Washington will be in religiously affiliated facilities. (aclu-wa.org)
  • In certain areas of Washington, the only hospitals or health care facilities serving the public are religiously affiliated. (aclu-wa.org)
  • Creating and expanding various types of incentive mechanisms/facilities including in - service training, career development planning, etc., for the health professionals. (who.int)
  • Doctors of the World also provides health facilities with medicine and equipment in order to improve conditions in Afar's clinics and hospitals. (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • This course introduces students to the primary areas of law that impose compliance obligations on healthcare providers. (shu.edu)
  • A third bill, SB 1094, would authorize the state Attorney General to impose reproductive health access requirements on the approval of any hospital mergers in the state. (fsrn.org)
  • Public Health 2014-2015. (who.int)
  • way to ensure that its reduction remains a public health priority. (who.int)
  • That's according to a recent study by the Guttmacher Institute, a public health advocacy think tank. (fsrn.org)
  • Responding to problematic drug use from a public health perspective is a far better approach. (aclu-wa.org)
  • 9.04 Health Education and Promotion: A major strategy to ensure better health would be to promote public health through health education within MOHFW and channels outside it. (who.int)
  • The final draft document of the National Health Conference did not obviously completely conform to the convictions of the Ministry of Public Health leadership. (yementimes.com)
  • In response to the cervical cancer burden, WHO has developed a global strategy to accelerate the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem, which proposes cost-effective interventions. (who.int)
  • The framework sets targets and milestones and defines guiding principles and priority interventions to guide Member States in accelerating the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem in the Region. (who.int)
  • The health risks associated with obesity make reducing the high prevalence of obesity a public health priority. (cdc.gov)
  • As the proportion of older adults in the United States is projected to increase dramatically in the coming decades, it is imperative that public health address and maintain the cognitive health of this growing population. (cdc.gov)
  • The public health community must be proactive in outlining the response to this growing crisis. (cdc.gov)
  • To prepare state, local, and tribal organizations, CDC and the Alzheimer's Association have developed a series of Road Maps that chart the public health response to dementia. (cdc.gov)
  • As a result, the public health response requires a life-course approach that focuses on reducing risk and identifying memory issues earlier to improve health outcomes. (cdc.gov)
  • The commitment and dedication to tobacco control and public health of al authorities is exemplary. (who.int)
  • Abortion is illegal in almost all circumstances in Paraguay, including in cases of rape or incest, and when the pregnancy poses a serious health risk. (hhrjournal.org)
  • All of these factors influence the ability of a working woman to raise a child or to decide not to go ahead with a pregnancy because the child cannot be adequately cared for. (dissentmagazine.org)
  • The newly constructed mission firstly focused on pastoral care, introducing chosen locals to the basics of catechetical instruction and imparting religious instruction to local students. (wikipedia.org)
  • State institutions provide only religious pastoral care, and the Catholic Church is the only religious or belief group given the right to conduct state marriages. (humanists.international)
  • Adults who have high BLLs may be at increased risk for high blood pressure, other cardiovascular effects, kidney problems, adverse reproductive outcomes, and gout. (cdc.gov)
  • Although the US State Department claimed that the elimination of references to reproductive rights was because the term " has several different meanings" and is an issue of "great policy debate" , UN experts and agencies consistently call for the full realization of sexual and reproductive rights, including access to safe, legal abortion. (hhrjournal.org)
  • 1 UN treaty bodies, the committees of experts that monitor the various human rights treaties, repeatedly reiterate the right to sexual and reproductive health and criticize governments which interfere with this right. (hhrjournal.org)
  • Under the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), organizations receiving U.S. government funds for the prevention of the sexual transmission of HIV may not only refuse on religious or moral grounds to directly provide condoms (or any other service to which they object), but they may also withhold information about condoms and refuse to refer clients to other programs through which condoms may be obtained. (guttmacher.org)
  • Planned Parenthood's chief healthcare officer Diana Contreras told Vice that preliminary data from just after the Roe reversal showed that the average number of birth control related questions received by the organization's sexual health advice chatbot doubled compared to previous data. (futurism.com)
  • Learn more about our sexual and reproductive healthcare work. (doctorsoftheworld.org)
  • The submission called on Malta to better respect sexual and reproductive health and rights, including by fully decriminalizing abortion and having abortion regulated as a matter of health policy. (humanists.international)
  • 2 Núcleo de Violência Sexual e Aborto Previsto em Lei do Hospital Pérola Byington. (bvsalud.org)
  • Weigel, 2017), with far reaching implications to are often transferred from one person to another during reproductive health, family health and the sanctity of sexual activity. (who.int)
  • Additionally, the ban harms queer families disproportionately and increases barriers to healthcare that trans and non-binary individuals already face. (dailyutahchronicle.com)