News

HEADLINES:
Doctor and patient
Guidelines: doctors seeing women wanting an abortion will have to reveal if they are pro-life and refer the patients to another GP

Anti-abortion doctors have to inform patients

Sophie Goodchild, Health Editor
17.03.08

Doctors who are anti-abortion will have to reveal their views to women seeking terminations.

Guidance published today says GPs must tell patients if they are pro-life and refer them to another medic.

Doctors who wear veils for religious reasons will be told it is good practice to remove them in certain circumstances.

These could include the treatment of deaf patients who need to lipread, or if the patient is uncomfortable not being able to see a doctor's face.

The guidelines, entitled Personal Beliefs and Medical Practice, were drawn up by the General Medical Council.

They also cover the provision of fertility treatment for gay couples and circumcision of male children when there is no medical reason for the procedure.

The GMC acknowledges doctors have personal beliefs that may affect their day-to-day practice, but it warns these must not compromise healthcare or lead to discrimination against patients.

The guidelines are expected to fuel tensions between anti- and proabortion campaigners.

A recent survey found that 20 per cent of GPs refused to send a woman for an abortion because they believed the procedure was morally wrong. In one case, a female doctor was reported to the GMC for advis-

ing patients to think twice about having a termination.

Dr Tammie Downes, a Christian GP from West Cornwall, refused to sign abortion forms and witnessed the births of eight babies whose mothers had come to her seeking a termination.

Jane O'Brien, the GMC's head of standards and medical ethics, said that in cases where a GP was antiabortion, "there are relatively few doctors who wouldn't refer patients on to another person".

"But they need to make sure they are letting the patient make their own choice and they are not coercing them," she added.

The guidance will be posted on the internet.

Katherine Murphy of the Patients Association said: "Most GPs are good doctors who treat patients with respect, regardless of lifestyle or beliefs. This guidance will reassure

patients that doctors are expected to put care first, over and above their own personal views." Sheikh Muhammad Yusuf, fellow of the Interfaith Alliance, whose members include doctors and patients, said: "Doctors are in a position of power in relation to their patients. This guidance makes it clear that any attempt to impose their religious or political views would be an abuse of that power."

London GP Dr Christian Jessen said he had witnessed prejudice among doctors towards patients and so the guidance was necessary.

Dr Jessen, who runs a sexual health clinic in Harley Street, added: "As someone who works with HIV patients, my reaction is it's vital we put our personal prejudices aside."

Link to: Digg Reddit Delicious Facebook

Reader views (3)

 Add your view

Here's a sample of the latest views published. You can click view all to read all views that readers have sent in.

To Paula, Brentwood, MD. USA These measures are being taken in the UK not the USA, so they don't concern you. You would be well advised to avoid inflicting your own prejudice on others in this "roundabout" way. Fortunately the so-called Pro-Life busybodies are thinner on the ground here than they are in your country - partly perhaps because gross intolerance and crass interference in the affairs of others is not quite so rife here as it is in the USA. We'd like to keep it that way - free of USA style railroaders.

- Anna, London UK

Pro abortion Doctors should have to do the same. We expect our Doctors to be compassionate and caring, yet we want them to be the executioners of our "mistakes," as if they can turn off their emotions and beliefs to suit the needs of every irresponsible person.

- Paula, Brentwood, MD. USA

Women would be better advised to contact a sexual health clinic than their GP on the subject of abortion in my opinion.

There is extreme prejudice against abortion in practitioners of other services, such as psychology, psychiatry, and psychoanalysis, and those persons should be obligated to declare their beliefs as well.

- Real, London


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 

Confidence lost on Black Friday

As uncertainty continues in the US over how far the Treasury there will follow the UK in offering equity to recapitalise major banks, it has become clear that the $700 billion Paulson plan and Federal Reserve support in money markets have not succeeded in restoring investor confidence

Turbulence for Cameron as he flies Air Freud

David Cameron's latest entry in the Register of Members' Interests shows that he has a generous new pal - Rupert Murdoch's son-in-law Matthew Freud

All stories


On This is London today

Don't miss...

  • Angel Flowers

    Hard times on the high street

    The Government has begun a massive rescue operation to prop up the crumbling pillars of the City but big institutions are not the only victims of the credit crunch. Ellen Widdup heads to Islington to see how ordinary businesses are coping
  • Bangers and mash

    Upside of the downturn

    Never mind all the gloom and doom — there are still lots of things to smile about
  • Michael Spencer

    The beginning of the end says the City’s top player

    After yesterday’s £500 billion bail out to the banks, Michael Spencer, the richest self-made man in the Square Mile talks exclusively to the Standard about who’s to blame
  • Boris Johnson

    The Influentials: London's top fifty

    Our annual survey of London’s 1000 most influential people is free with today’s Evening Standard - here we reveal the chart-toppers

City Briefing

The latest top City stories and Market report emailed to you twice a day.

Read the latest bulletin

Rosamund

Urwin Podcasts

on the City Markets



Pick of the blogs

Waugh
Paul Waugh - politics
Gordon Brown's sofa shuffle
Godwin
Richard Godwin - A London Life
The ideal day for a night out