Between 2001 and 2016, the number of Catholic-owned or affiliated
hospitals rose 22 percent to 548 from 449, most of them nonprofit
facilities, MergerWatch said in a report released on Thursday.
While adherence varies, many of these hospitals follow the
directives of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops which
prohibits on religious grounds procedures that can interfere with
conception or that terminate pregnancy.
"In general, Catholic hospitals provide excellent care," said Lois
Uttley, director of MergerWatch and an author of the report. "Our
concern is with these restrictions with reproductive healthcare."
The Catholic Health Association could not comment on the report
before it was made public.
MergerWatch said it seeks to protect patients rights as hospitals
merge, with support from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
and philanthropic institutions such as the Ford Foundation.
MergerWatch's last count of Catholic-owned or affiliated hospitals,
released in 2013, showed 381 facilities as of 2011, up from 329 in
2001. Its new report added a count of Catholic hospitals acquired by
secular health systems which continue to follow religious
directives, as well as public or nonprofit hospitals that do not
declare an affiliation but are managed or owned by Catholic health
systems.
In all, 14.5 percent of all acute care hospitals in the country are
now Catholic-owned or affiliated, the MergerWatch report said. The
concentration is much higher in 10 U.S. states, including
Washington, Colorado and Missouri, where more than 30 percent of
acute care beds are in Catholic-owned or affiliated facilities.
The ACLU said women may be unaware of the restrictions at a
particular hospital until they arrive at an emergency room during a
miscarriage.
Julia Kaye, a staff attorney with the ACLU Reproductive Freedom
Project, has seen an uptick in complaints and litigation since 2013.
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Kaye said this issue has been a problem for a long time, but “it is
gaining more national attention.”
Jennafer Norris, 37, contacted the ACLU about her experience eight
months ago at a Catholic hospital in Arkansas. She does not plan to
file a lawsuit but has begun speaking about her case publicly. The
ACLU put Reuters in touch with her.
Norris is a former social worker who was using the long-term
contraceptive IUD, or intrauterine device, but became pregnant. She
developed high blood pressure and other complications seen during
two previous pregnancies.
A doctor at the hospital determined she needed a Caesarian-section
eight weeks before her due date to protect her and the baby. Norris
asked for a tubal ligation at the same time to ensure she would not
get pregnant again, but the Catholic hospital refused.
"They told me I had to go along with their hospital procedures or
discharge myself against medical advice and go to another hospital,"
said Norris.
(Reporting By Jilian Mincer; Editing by Michele Gershberg and
Bernard Orr)
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