Connecticut Catholic Bishops Agree To Comply With Law Requiring Hospitals To Dispense EC To Rape Survivors

Rape Survivors

Connecticut's Roman Catholic bishops on Thursday said that the state's four Catholic hospitals will comply with a law (SB 1343) that takes effect Monday and requires all hospitals in the state to dispense emergency contraception to rape survivors, the Hartford Courant reports (Keating, Hartford Courant, 9/28).

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Spirituality and Healing

Thelaw, which was signed by Gov. M. Jodi Rell (R) in May, requires thatrape survivors be given a pregnancy test before receiving EC, which canprevent pregnancy if taken within 72 hours of sexual intercourse, anddoes not require hospitals to provide the drug to women who testpositive for pregnancy. In addition, hospitals can contract with athird-party provider to provide EC rather than require employees todispense the drug.

Archbishop Henry Mansell last year instructed Catholic hospitals in the state not to prescribe Barr Laboratories' EC Plan B if rape survivors are ovulating or if an egg has been fertilized (Kaiser Daily Women's Health Policy Report, 5/18). The bishops and officials from the state's Catholic hospitals in a joint statementsaid that "since the teaching authority of the church has notdefinitively resolved this matter and since there is serious doubtabout how Plan B pills work," the hospital staff will be allowed toprovide EC to rape survivors without administering an ovulation test(Haigh, AP/Boston Globe, 9/28).

Thebishop's statement said the law's requirement that a pregnancy test,rather than an ovulation test, be administered before EC is dispensedis sufficient because of the "current impossibility of knowing from theovulation test whether a new life is present." In addition, the bishopssaid that EC will be administered by employees of the Catholichospitals rather than by outside contractors. Barry Feldman, anattorney for the Connecticut Catholic Conference, said the conference has not "heard objections" to the law from emergency department staff (Hartford Courant, 9/28).

According to the AP/Globe, before the law was passed, non-Catholic hospitals had inconsistent policies on EC. According to the Connecticut Sexual Assault Crisis Services, 40% of rape survivors were not offered or did not receive the full dose of EC in the first six months of 2006 (AP/Boston Globe, 9/28).

Comments

Although the Catholic hospitals have agreed to follow the law, church officials still are opposed to it, the Courant reports."We continue to believe this law should be changed," the bishops said,adding that they believe the law "is seriously flawed, but notsufficiently to bar compliance with it at the present time." Theyadded, "If it becomes clear that Plan B pills would lead to an earlychemical abortion in some instances, this matter would have to bereopened" (Hartford Courant, 9/28).

Laura Cordes,policy and advocacy director for the assault crisis service at CSACS,said the Catholic Church's announcement is "welcome news for women inConnecticut who survive rape and turn to hospitals for treatment andevidence collection" (AP/Boston Globe, 9/28).

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Reprinted with permission fromkaisernetwork.org.You can view the entire KaiserDaily Women's Health Policy Report, search thearchives, and sign up for email delivery at kaisernetwork.org/email. The Kaiser Daily Women's Health Policy Report is published forkaisernetwork.org,a free service of The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. 2007Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rightsreserved.

By: kaisernetwork.org - Tue, 10/02/2007 - 05:13

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