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

HomePatients’ Rights – Informed Consent

Informed Consent

Patients must be informed of all treatment options so that they are able to give fully informed consent based on medical recommendations and their own individual and ethical and religious beliefs.  It should not be considered acceptable hospital practice to withhold information about some treatment options because of a hospital’s ethical or religious policies.

Hospitals that serve the general public and receive public funding should adopt policies that explicitly ensure patients’ right to be informed of all treatment options, including those not offered at the hospital. Such policies should be prominently posted within the hospital, incorporated into employee training and enforced though quality assurance and other internal review programs.

Further, hospital licensing and accreditation authorities should incorporate into licensing and accreditation requirements the assurance of fully informed patient consent.  Compliance should be documented in hospital records and reviewed periodically by licensing and accreditation authorities.

Finally, compliance with fully-informed consent requirements should be a condition of hospital participation in the federal Medicare and Medicaid programs.  The existing informed consent language for those programs should be strengthened to explicitly state that information about treatment options may not be withheld from patients because of hospital ethical or religious practices.