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Rose Jade says patients' health-care options shouldn't be limited
by directives from Catholic bishops. |

HEALTH
The Pope in Your Bedpan
A legal
battle on the Oregon Coast could foreshadow fights over Bush's faith-based
initiatives plan.
by
NICK BUDNICK
nbudnick@wweek.com
When George W. Bush opened an "Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives" inside the White House earlier this year, he touched
off a national debate about the wisdom of mixing religion and government.
Here in Oregon,
however, government providing services through religious-based groups
is nothing new--nor is the controversy surrounding it.
For more than
a year, a legal storm has been brewing on the Oregon coast, precipitated
by Providence Health System's proposed takeover of a publicly funded
hospital there.
The storm, which
comes to a head next week, shows how church-and-state issues can
affect Oregonians' day-to-day lives--and may do so increasingly
in the future. Providence, overseen by the Catholic order of the
Sisters of Providence, is a rapidly growing health chain and plans
to serve one out of three Oregonians by 2007.
In January 2000,
the Pacific Communities Health District proposed letting the Seattle-based
Catholic hospital chain run its hospital in Newport, as well as
five clinics.
Then Providence
ran smack into Rose Jade.
Jade, a spunky
Portland patent lawyer, got involved because she owns an apartment
in Newport. The more she learned about the proposed deal, the more
alarmed she became. And she's not alone. Catholic health-care chains
have been a major player in the industry's merger mania for the
past five years, and pro-choice and assisted-suicide activists have
grown increasingly alarmed that religious affiliations are limiting
citizens' access to medical services.
For patients
of Catholic hospitals, says Jade, "You're living in America, but
you're basically living in the Vatican." So she challenged the agreement
in court, representing herself as plaintiff.
For the past
year, Catholic health-care entities and women's choice groups have
been watching the Lincoln County courtroom of Judge Robert Huckleberry.
Coming to Jade's aid have been Portland lawyers Jane Paulson, Maureen
Leonard and Art LaFrance, a professor at Lewis & Clark's Northwestern
School of Law. They faced off with two high-powered Portland law
firms: Tonkin Torp and Stoel Rives, representing Providence and
the health district.
Jade's allies
noted that the hospital district is funded by a local tax levy (through
the Pacific Communities Health District). They argued that funneling
that money to Providence would violate the constitutional wall between
church and state.
The practical
effect of the Providence takeover, they argued, would be restricted
health care. All Catholic hospitals are governed by a set of rules
called the Ethical and Religious Directives, formulated by the National
Conference of Catholic Bishops. Those directives forbid any form
of birth control--from vasectomies and tubal ligations to abortions,
RU-486 and standard birth-control pills. The directives also ban
physician-assisted suicide.
In his court
testimony, Father John Tuohy, the head ethicist for Providence,
acknowledged that all doctors and employees of the system must agree
to obey those directives.
But he also
conceded that there are some loopholes. First, the directives apply
only to practices on Providence premises. In other words, Providence
doctors can provide abortions or vasectomies in other clinics if
they want to. In addition, he says, contraceptives could still be
prescribed at Providence hospitals--because prescriptions are between
the patient and the doctor. "We don't monitor those conversations,"
he said. "We couldn't do that without disrupting the patient-physician
relationship."
In other words,
Providence doctors can violate their employment agreement to obey
the directives--as long as they don't tell the hospital.
So if this is
true, what are people worried about?
Jim Kronenberg,
associate executive director of the Oregon Medical Association,
says that the spread of Catholic health care is mostly an issue
in rural areas where the only hospitals are Catholic.
But even in
Portland, where doctors and patients can choose between hospitals,
the Catholic restrictions are an issue, say doctors interviewed
by WW.
Dr. Jim Newhall
says that patients' access to health-care choices relies on full
information--and patients often are not aware that religious issues
may affect their doctor's counsel. "Patients don't understand that,"
says Newhall, who performs abortions in Portland. "If you go to
a hospital, you expect to be taken care of."
According to
one Portland Providence doctor who spoke on condition of anonymity,
Providence's "don't ask, don't tell" policy sometimes conflicts
with the ethical requirement that doctors put patient first. For
instance, he says, when it comes to physician-assisted suicide "you
can't talk to patients about it if you work for the Sisters." At
the same time, he says, "You've got to do what's right for the patient.
I personally would never sacrifice that for anybody."
Doctors say
patients' health-care options shouldn't depend on their doctors'
willingness to violate the bishops' directives--by telling them,
for instance, that they may want to get their tubes tied.
Dr. Michael
Garland, a social ethics professor at OHSU, says the issue of whether
patients are fully informed at Catholic facilities has come up before
the Medicaid Advisory Committee of the Oregon Health Plan. "We asked
that question," says Garland, who sits on the committee, "and the
answer wasn't clear."
It was concerns
such as these that led Jade to challenge the merger. But now she
may face a victory that feels like a loss.
In January,
after the trial took place but before Huckleberry could rule, Providence
canceled the operating agreement and attempted to pull the case
from court, saying that years of litigation would distract the chain
from its mission.
Jade and other
pro-choice activists think Providence just wants to avoid losing,
and thereby dodge paying the other side's legal fees. "I think that
Providence really wants to avoid a ruling on the merits," she says.
"They cost us hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorneys' fees
and expenses. Unless the court makes a ruling, it's going to all
be a waste."
Her concern
is that Providence is already working on a new operating agreement
with the district that may raise the same concerns. On March 21,
the two sides will once again argue before Huckleberry to decide
the issue.
In the meantime,
Jade views Bush's faith-based initiatives plan, which would direct
government agencies to expand theirs partnerships with faith-based
groups, with alarm. "It's a very slippery slope," she says. "But
if we start going down this road, Providence is in the perfect position
to reap the rewards."
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