Literature DB >> 24117664

Conscientious refusal and health professionals: does religion make a difference?

Daniel Weinstock.   

Abstract

Freedom of Conscience and Freedom of Religion should be taken to protect two distinct sets of moral considerations. The former protects the ability of the agent to reflect critically upon the moral and political issues that arise in her society generally, and in her professional life more specifically. The latter protects the individual's ability to achieve secure membership in a set of practices and rituals that have as a moral function to inscribe her life in a temporally extended narrative. Once these grounds are distinguished, it becomes more difficult to grant healthcare professionals' claims to religious exemptions on the basis of the latter than it is on the basis of the former. While both sets of considerations generate 'internal reasons' for rights to accommodation, the relevant 'external' reasons present in the case of claims of moral conscience do not possess analogues in the case of claims of religious conscience. However, the argument applies only to 'irreducibly religious' claims, that is to claims that cannot be translated into moral vocabulary. What's more, there may be reasons to grant the claims of religious persons to exemptions that have to do not with the nature of the claims, but with the beneficial effects that the presence of religious persons may have in the context of the healthcare institutions of multi-faith societies.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conscientious refusal; reasonable accommodation; religion

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24117664     DOI: 10.1111/bioe.12059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioethics        ISSN: 0269-9702            Impact factor:   1.898


  5 in total

1.  Rationing conscience.

Authors:  Dominic Wilkinson
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2016-10-12       Impact factor: 2.903

2.  Conscientious Objection: A Talmudic Paradigm Shift.

Authors:  Rabbi Jason Weiner
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2020-04

3.  Conscientious Objection in Health Care: Pinning down the Reasonability View.

Authors:  Doug McConnell
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  2021-01-25

4.  Accommodating conscientious objection in the midwifery workforce: a ratio-data analysis of midwives, birth and late abortions in 18 European countries in 2016.

Authors:  Valerie Fleming; Clare Maxwell; Beate Ramsayer
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2020-06-08

5.  Tensions Between Ethics and the Law: Examination of a Legal Case by Two Midwives Invoking a Conscientious Objection to Abortion in Scotland.

Authors:  Valerie Fleming; Lucy Frith; Beate Ramsayer
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2021-09
  5 in total

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