FOR
MARRIAGE AND SPOUSAL LOVE (Part 7) |
7) Catholic Doctors and Nurses
The
life issues belong to doctors and nurses in a special
manner. These professionals deal directly with bodily life
and fostering human health. People naturally look to them
for good guidance in matters of biological life and health.
Thus it is imperative that they be actively engaged in the
pro-life movement, and become active artisans of the culture
of life. They should be the natural allies of the pro-life
movement.
The
reality is that many Catholic doctors reflect the values of
their secular society instead of their faith. Some clear
examples of this are contraception and sterilization. In
the USA, only one percent of Catholic ob/gyns and family
practice doctors are completely pro-life, which means that
they refuse to prescribe contraception, perform
sterilizations, use immoral methods of overcoming
infertility, or make referrals to those who will. The other
99 percent are contributing to the problem.
This
discrepancy becomes glaringly evident when a Catholic couple
is faced with the contradiction between what the Church
teaches about contraception and what their local Catholic
doctor prescribes. The typical couple will reason, “If my
doctor, who is a devout Catholic, prescribes the Pill, and
he is the medical professional, then why should the Church
be against it?” And many couples follow the lead of the
doctors. Nor are these contradictions addressed from the
pulpit.
Most
Catholic physicians do not understand the Church’s teaching
on contraception and sterilization. They never took
comprehensive courses in medical ethics, aside from the
secularized versions they found in state medical schools
that justify contemporary trends. Most Catholic doctors do
not understand NFP, or how medically sophisticated it has
become, or how superior Naprotechnology (natural procreative
technology) is to other forms of overcoming infertility
problems.
There
are several major deterrents to the conversion of Catholic
doctors from prescribing contraception to endorsing NFP.
The first of these is financial. There is no profit to be
made in encouraging NFP, which requires several classes to
learn the method, and then no further expense. Placing
their signature on regular prescriptions for the Pill, on
the other hand, generates a steady income, sometimes
accounting for 30-40% of a doctor’s income. Many Catholic
doctors are terrified at the thought of losing this
percentage of their income.
A
second deterrent is the time factor. It requires time to
help a couple learn their physiology, to chart their cycles,
and to accurately interpret the signals the body gives of
approaching fertility. Problems with irregular cycles will
require consultations. All this is very helpful in
promoting sexual and reproductive health, but it is time
consuming and without financial gains.
A
third deterrent is the pressure upon doctors to conform to
the conventional norms of the medical profession.
Pharmaceuticals place enormous pressure upon doctors to sell
their products that are very lucrative. Planned Parenthood
and radical feminists push hard for easy access to
“reproductive health,” and “safe sex,” which includes
contraception and abortion. Professional medical societies
accept these pressures and make them part of their
professional policy. Medical schools accept these
disvalues, and rigorously enforce them in their curriculum
of courses.
The
financial factor (making profits) should not be allowed to
override the moral factor. But this will only change when
Catholic doctors, and nurses, are given the rationale that
supports the Church’s teaching about medical ethics. Some
dioceses are successfully reaching out to their doctors by
providing regular (annual, or semi-annual) gatherings for
their medical personnel. A bishop will send out invitations
to all the doctors and nurses for an evening gathering with
a light desert. The bishop speaks to them and encourages
the doctors and nurses to become effective artisans of the
culture of life. Then a medical doctor makes a presentation
on a pertinent medical topic, and explains the Church’s
rationale that supports the relevant moral principles.
Objections and questions are answered. Consciences are
informed. Conversions of mind and heart are encouraged.
These
gatherings, in effect, are classes in medical ethics. They
are the most effective way to bring our Catholic doctors and
nurses back into the service of God’s plan for human life,
sexual health, and the reality that we are all
bodied-persons. Without the support of our own medical
personnel, it is unrealistic to expect the culture of death
to be challenged.
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