March 24, 2009
Office of Public Health and Science
Attention: Rescission Proposal Comments
Hubert H. Humphrey Bldg.
Room 716G
Re: Proposed rescission of 45 C.F.R. Pt. 88 (“Ensuring that Dept. of HHS Funds Do Not Support Coercive or Discriminatory Policies or Practices in Violation of Federal Law”), 74 Fed. Reg. 10207-01 (Mar. 10, 2009).
Dear Acting Secretary Johnson:
On behalf of the National Catholic Partnership on Disability[1] and the 14 million disabled Catholics it represents, I urge you not to rescind the “Health Care Provider Conscience Rule.” Rescission will expose providers to discrimination and coercion for attempting to protect disabled human life.
The history of people with disabilities and their treatment in the United States is one “that can only be called grotesque.”[2] For much of the last century, such people were banished from public life—hidden in back rooms,[3] excluded from common schools,[4] stored in institutions,[5] and often ‘neutered’ there “to prevent our being swamped with incompetence.”[6] Such mistreatment, an astute observer concluded, “in its virulence and bigotry rivaled, and indeed paralleled, the worst excesses of Jim Crow.”[7] Once mainstreaming finally began, disabled people only found themselves “the poorest, least educated [and] largest minority in
The sad reality is that people with disabilities face even greater risks today. Present threats to life—abortion, euthanasia, and assisted suicide—are often aimed against disabling conditions. A fetal abnormality is routinely considered a death warrant, not a diagnosis.[9] Withholding food or treatment from certain disabled newborns has become an open secret.[10] Disabled adults are told that, by electing suicide with the caring help of others, they assert their autonomy by choosing to make themselves dead.[11]
Presently, pre-natal testing, such as amniocentesis, can detect about 70 different anomalous conditions.[12] Fetuses with Down syndrome, spina bifida, and anencephaly are virtually always aborted; those with less debilitating conditions, such as Turner and Klinefelter syndromes, are aborted more often than not.[13] Further, pre-implantation testing now permits the elimination of embryos immediately following a diagnosis of suspected genetic or chromosomal defects.[14] As detection improves and more anomalies are identified, abortions of disabled pre-natal life will increase. Rescinding Part 88 will undoubtedly compel many health care providers to choose between closing their doors, leaving their professions, losing their livelihoods or terminating these lives.
It is people of conscience—those doctors, nurses, and hospital administrators who refuse on moral and religious grounds to participate in such abortions—who take seriously the claim of American law that the presence of a disability does not lessen human worth.[15] As people with disabilities, we are indebted to their courage and stand with them to oppose rescinding regulations that will expose them to the violation of conscience. As people who value the sanctity of life because we have known its abuse, we can do nothing less.
Respectfully submitted,
Stephen L. Mikochik
Chairman
National Catholic Partnership on Disability
415 Michigan Avenue, NE, Suite 95
Washington, DC 20017-4501
202-529-2933/ Fax 202-529-4678
[1] The National Catholic Partnership on Disability was established twenty-six years ago to implement the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ 1978 Pastoral Statement on Persons with Disabilities, available at www.ncpd.org.
[2] City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, 473 U.S. 432, 461 (1985) (Marshall, J., joined by Brennan & Blackmun, JJ., concurring in part & dissenting in part).
[3] For example, a Chicago ordinance once forbade those “diseased, maimed, mutilated, or in any way deformed so as to be an unsightly or disgusting object ... [from exposing themselves] to public view.” P. Longmore & E. Bouvia, “Assisted Suicide and Social Prejudice,” 3 Issues in L. & Med. 141, 144 n.18 (Fall, 1987) (quoting F. Bowe, Handicapping America 186 (1978)).
[4] See S. Rep. No. 168, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 41 (1975) (estimating that over 1 million disabled children were then excluded from public schools).
[5] See Wyatt v. Aderholt, 503 F.2d 1305, 1313 (5th Cir. 1974) (quoting testimony of Dr. Gunnar Dybwad (“The situation which exists and obviously has existed in ... [the Alabama State School and Hospital for the Mentally Retarded] for a long time is one of storage, of persons. I am using that word because I would not use care, which involves- has a certain qualitative character, and I would not even use the word, ‘custodial,’ because custody, in my term, means safekeeping. ... [S]o I would say it is a storage problem at the moment.”)).
[6] Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200, 207 (1927) (Holmes, J.) (Upholding constitutionality of compulsory sterilization of institutionalized retarded woman on grounds that “[t]hree generations of imbeciles are enough.”).
[7] City of Cleburne, 473
[8] S. Rep. No. 116, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 9 (1989) (quoting statement of then Vice President George Bush).
[9] See
[10] See
[11] Cf. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521
[12] See Baylor College of Medicine Medical Genetics Laboratories, “Abnormalities Detected V.5.0,” available at http://www.bcm.edu/geneticlabs/cma/assets/abnormalities.pdf.
[13] See supra note 9.
[14] See Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction “Dignitas Personae”: On Certain Bioethical Questions (June 20, 2008), available at http://www.campchabad.com/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfa....
[15] See, e.g., Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.; Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794.