On 21 June this year I wrote to Mr Niall Dickson, Chief Executive
of the General Medical Council, to point out that in the light of a recent
court judgement, their guidance on doctors’ involvement in abortion was now
out of step with the law.
I asked him if they intended to revise it.
After follow up letters and phone calls I eventually received a
reply from Ms Sharon Burton, Head of Standards and Ethics Section, on 19
August.
She defended the current GMC guidance, arguing that the section I
had queried was in the annex to the guidance and not the guidance itself; and
that the court judgement I had referred to was the subject of an appeal to the
Supreme Court.
I have published both letters below without further comment.
Doctors wishing not to be involved in abortion on conscience
grounds, and concerned about their standing with the GMC and under the law,
should be aware of this correspondence and of the fact that the scope of the
conscience clause in the Abortion Act 1967 is a matter of some controversy.
My letter to the GMC (21 June
2013)
Dear Mr
Dickson,
I’m writing
to enquire whether the General Medical Council intends to revise its guidance
on ‘Personal
Beliefs and Medical Practice’ in the light of the recent Glasgow appeal
court ruling on participation in abortion and, if so, what the timescales for
the revision are.
You will be
aware that two Roman Catholic midwives won a landmark legal battle in April to
avoid taking any part in abortion procedures.
Mary Doogan,
58, and Concepta Wood, 52, had lost a previous case against NHS Greater Glasgow
and Clyde (GGC) when the court ruled that their human rights had not been
violated as they were not directly involved in terminations.
However
appeal judges ruled their right to conscientious objection means they can
refuse to delegate, supervise or support staff involved in abortions.
The judgment
is significant and has relevance also to doctors.
As you will
know the Abortion Act 1967 gives healthcare professionals the right to
conscientiously object to ‘participate’ in abortion but the scope of the word
‘participate’ has been the matter of some legal dispute.
But Lady
Dorrian, who heard the recent challenge with Lord Mackay of Drumadoon and Lord
McEwan, said: ‘In our view the right of conscientious objection extends not
only to the actual medical or surgical termination but to the whole
process of treatment given for that purpose.’
She said the
conscientious objection in the legislation is given ‘not because the acts in
question were previously, or may have been, illegal’ but ‘because it is
recognised that the process of abortion is felt by many people to be morally
repugnant’.
She added:
‘It is in keeping with the reason for the exemption that the wide
interpretation which we favour should be given to it. It is consistent with the
reasoning which allowed such an objection in the first place that it
should extend to any involvement in the process of treatment, the object of
which is to terminate a pregnancy.’
In the
earlier judgement Lady Smith had said that since the midwives were not
covered by the conscience clause as ‘they (were) not being asked to play any
direct role in bringing about terminations of pregnancy’.
But this has
now been overturned.
The GMC guidance, which interestingly came into force earlier
in the very week of the judgement, is at odds with this ruling. It currently
reads:
‘In England,
Wales and Scotland the right to refuse to participate in terminations of
pregnancy (other than where the termination is necessary to save the life
of, or prevent grave injury to, the pregnant woman), is protected by
law under section 4(1) of the Act. This right is limited to refusal to
participate in the procedure(s) itself and not to pre- or post-treatment care,
advice or management, see the Janaway case: Janaway v Salford Area Health
Authority [1989] 1AC 537′
In para 33
of the Judgment the court makes clear that professional guidelines
can be legally wrong and cannot overrule statute, it says:
‘Great
respect should be given to the advice provided hitherto by the professional
bodies, but prior practice does not necessarily dictate interpretation.
Moreover, when the subject of the advice concerns a matter of law, there is
always the possibility that the advice from the professional body is
incorrect’.
Because this
Judgment is from a Scottish Court (and Scotland is a different jurisdiction to
England and Wales) it is not strictly binding on an English Court. However it
will nonetheless have significant persuasive force in England.
The Abortion
Act 1967 applies in England, Wales and Scotland (but not in Northern Ireland)
and when Scottish Courts have adjudicated on such ‘cross border’ legislation in
the past their decisions have been taken very seriously in England and Wales
and vice versa.
We have been
concerned for some time that the GMC was over-interpreting the law in a
grey area in issuing its guidance. But this latest judgement has clarified the
law in a way that now makes that virtually certain.
Christian
Medical Fellowship has over 4,000 doctors and 1,000 medical students as members
and the vast majority would have a moral objection to participation in
abortion. Many other doctors share these views.
I trust that
the GMC will move swiftly to review and revise their guidance so that doctors
with a conscientious objection to abortion are clear where they now stand.
As I said
above I would most grateful for an indication of your plans for review along
with timescales so that I can keep our members informed about this important
development which has practical implications for many of them.
Yours
sincerely
Peter
Saunders
CEO
Christian
Medical Fellowship
Reply from Sharon Burton, Head of
Standards and Ethics Section, GMC (21 August 2013)
Dear Peter,
Thank you
for your letter about the decision of the court in the case of Doogan and Wood
v. NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde Health Board [2013] CSIH 36.
We have, of
course, been following this case with interest and have read the judgment with
some care. We agree that the judgment gives a wider meaning to 'participate in
terminations of pregnancy' than the determination in the Janaway case in 1989.
However, we are not persuaded that this position is in conflict with the GMC's
guidance in Personal Beliefs in
Medical Practice (2013).
In that
guidance we make clear that we do not wish to preclude doctors from practising
in accordance with their values and beliefs, and we do not limit the exercise
of conscientious objections, except where that would not be lawful; result in
treating patients unfairly; deny patients access to treatment or cause them
distress.
In our view,
this guidance is consistent with the Doogan and Wood judgment - our guidance
allows doctors to exercise a conscientious objection to any part of the
procedure, where the objective is the termination of a pregnancy.
You refer to
the brief reference to the Janaway judgment in the Legal Annex to our guidance.
This section is not part of the guidance. As we state at the beginning of the
Annex:
This annex is for reference only. It is not intended
to be a comprehensive statement of the law or list of relevant legislation and
case law, nor is it a substitute for up-to-date legal advice.
As we
understand the current position, it is more than possible that Greater Glasgow
and Clyde Health Board will appeal the decision of the Court of Session. In
view of the terms of our guidance, and the caveats expressed in our legal
annex, we do not think it is necessary to make any changes to our document at
this stage.
Thank you
for raising the issue with us. I hope this makes clear our position.
Yours
sincerely
Sharon
Burton
Head of
Standards and Ethics Section
'Our guidance allows doctors to exercise a conscientious objection to any part of the procedure, where the objective is the termination of a pregnancy' - any part meaning indirect actions such as referral etc. Am I right in reading what Sharon Burton is saying? If so I'm keeping a copy of this letter to hand...
ReplyDeleteI agree it is a strong statement. The question is how the previous paragraph would work in practice: '...we do not limit the exercise of conscientious objections, except where that would not be lawful; result in treating patients unfairly; deny patients access to treatment or cause them distress.'
ReplyDeleteYes. The 'causing patients distress' line is worryingly fluffy as that could apply basically to any GP, any referral where the patient is 'distressed'. I see a number of parents 'distressed' that the GP did not refer their baby for their reflux - does that make them in breach of GMC guidelines? Of course not. So why the double standards?
ReplyDelete