Top Corners

Pharmacy RefusalsPharmacy Refusals

MergerWatch releases new toolkit for advocates to ensure that women’s prescriptions are filled at the pharmacy. Read "Protecting Women’s Rights at the Pharmacy Counter" to find out what you can do.


Hospital MergersHospital Mergers

Religious/Secular hospital mergers can infringe on your community’s access to health services and restrict your family’s medical care. Find out more.


In The NewsIn The News

Raising Women’s Voices for the Health Care We Need: Learn more.

Catholic Journal Says Emergency Contraception Does Not Cause Abortion

New Hampshire AG Objects to Proposed Affiliation Between Catholic Medical Center and Dartmouth Hitchcock

Illinois Advocates Seek to Stop Religious Restrictions at 2 Catholic Hospitals After Sale to For-Profit Health System

Arizona Nun Ex-Communicated for Allowing Abortion to Save Woman's Life

President Obama Issues Memo on LGBT Health Issues

Catholic Nun: Honesty Important in Health Reform Debate Over Abortion Coverage

In medical decision-making, the patient’s rights must come first

Religious faith can be an important resource for some patients, providing guidance, hope or acceptance in the face of serious illness.

But medical care that is restricted by institutional religious doctrine or the provider’s moral beliefs can pose a significant threat to patients’ rights and access to care:

  • Pharmacists may refuse to fill prescriptions for contraceptives and other medicines they view as morally unacceptable.
  • Hospitals may ban treatment that conflicts with religious doctrine.
  • Employers and managed care plans may refuse to provide health insurance coverage for contraception, sterilization or abortion.
  • Physicians may refuse to provide fertility services to families they find morally unacceptable.
  • Politicians responding to religious conservatives may enact laws that make it difficult for patients to refuse end-of-life treatment.

MergerWatch is dedicated to the principle that health care should be guided by accurate medical information and the patient’s own religious or ethical beliefs. In medical decision-making, the patient’s rights must come first.

Learn more about our health care reform project by clicking on the Raising Women's Voices logo below: