'Conscience' bills let medical providers opt out of providing a wide range of care


A hospital hallway is shown in this file photo.

A new Montana law will provide sweeping legal protections to health care practitioners who refuse to prescribe marijuana or participate in procedures and treatments such as abortion, medically assisted death, gender-affirming care, or others that run afoul of their ethical, moral, or religious beliefs or principles.

The law, which goes into effect in October, will gut patients’ ability to take legal action if they believe they didn’t receive proper care due to a conscientious objection by a provider or an institution, such as a hospital.

So-called medical conscience objection laws have existed at the state and federal levels for years, with most protecting providers who refuse to perform an abortion or sterilization procedure. But the new Montana law, and others like it that have passed or been introduced in statehouses across the U.S., goes further, to the point of undermining patient care and threatening the right of people to receive lifesaving and essential care, according to critics.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

'Create havoc': House GOP wants to defund the FBI. A 2024 candidate wants to shut it down. What to know

Next Story

Parents can reduce a child's peanut allergy risk with these steps. Most don't know them.

Latest from News