The National Center for Lesbian Rights on Tuesday issued a statement praising the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for rescinding “the the most harmful aspects” of the Trump-era “conscience rule.” The policy, which passed in 2019, was blocked by three federal courts and never implemented.
It would have allowed healthcare providers to deny care based on religious objections. “The revised rule,” NCLR Federal Policy Director Julianna Gonen said, “is premised on the recognition that a proper balance must be struck between respecting conscience and ensuring that people get the health care they need.” Gonen noted the persistence of discrimination against LGBTQ patients, adding “this new rule is a welcome development that will help protect our community.” The final rule released on Tuesday by HHS reverses provisions of the previous policy under which federal funding would be stripped from facilities that required providers to administer care over which they had religious-based objections.
Namely, this largely meant abortions, contraception, and gender-affirming treatments. “Some doctors, nurses, and hospitals, for example, object for religious or moral reasons to providing or referring for abortions or assisted suicide, among other procedures,” the agency wrote. “Respecting such objections honors liberty and human dignity.” Likewise, HHS said, “patients also have rights and health needs, sometimes urgent ones.” The post HHS wins praise for rescinding parts of Trump-era ‘conscience rule’ appeared first on Washington Blade: LGBTQ News, Politics, LGBTQ Rights, Gay News.