The constant debate over the rights of those who identify with a particular sexual identity seems never-ending. How does it affect nursing? How does the new proposed bill in Michigan make the situation change? Find out the facts before forming an opinion.
Patients come in all sorts of flavors. You have your frequent flyers, your noncompliants, your criminals, and your sweet little senior citizens. All patients are different, and this is part of the joy of nursing. Everyone has their own story, and we get to listen to them, help them, and see them flourish. While not everyone agrees with it, patients come in all kinds of sexual orientations, too. You can have those who are gay, bisexual, transexual, or transvestites. Just a normal day on the job for a nurse, right?
Sexual identity is a hot button issue, and it is becoming hotter. The internet almost blew up a few weeks ago about a Michigan law that purported to allow EMS personnel to deny treatment to patients who identified with a particular sexual identity. Supposedly, this bill allowed medical personnel to refuse based on religious beliefs. You can't believe everything you read on the internet, folks, and there is more to this story than meets the eye. It still brings up the ethical question: can medical workers refuse to treat those who violate a strongly held religious belief?
The bill currently under consideration in Michigan is called the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act, or RFRA. It is currently in the Michigan house, where it was proposed, and still has to work through the system and be signed by the government before it is law. Therefore, the RFRA is not a law in Michigan, despite what the internet says. It is a long, long way from that, and it could change drastically as the politicians get their hands on it. No need to worry, really. It's just an idea at this point.
Another crucial bit to understand is that the bill does not specifically give medical personnel the right to refuse treatment to gay people. The bill doesn't mention medicine or homosexuals at all. Instead, the bill suggests that a person who is by law required to act can choose not to act due to a strongly held religious belief. This means that it could be used as a defense in court if the one who should act is sued by the one not acted upon. Mostly, this would entail civil cases, but this isn't where the story ends.
As most lawyers do, far more has been read into this bill than originally intended. Opponents of the bill have suggested that this law could be applied to medical personnel, from doctors to nurses to EMTs. In fact, it could affect any person required by law to act, and they would be in their rights to refuse. Please note, this is not what the bill says, but it is merely a possibility that could be read into the law to protect a medical professional who didn't act when they were required to.
It also brings up the idea of religious freedom. If you know that someone is gay and you disagree with that, do you have to act? The proposed law technically says no. When you hold a sincere and strong religious belief about something, the state cannot force you to act against those beliefs -- even if it means that someone else suffers because of it. This is a bit about the separation of church and state in addition to medicine. How far do religious beliefs go? Can you refuse someone anything because they don't agree with your religious point of view? For instance, should you be forced to rent your property to someone who is gay? According to this law, you wouldn't have to, and that would get you out of a discrimination suit.
Despite the fact that this bill is far from a law and despite the fact that it doesn't directly affect medical workers, it does bring up a disturbing question: do nurses have the right to refuse to treat patients who are gay? Look at it this way: Do we have the right to refuse treatment of someone with HIV or Ebola? Do we have the right to refuse treatment of a patient whose religion is different than ours? Do we have the right to refuse treatment to those who have a violent criminal past? I have taken care of child molesters, rapists, and murders. I certainly don't agree with their actions, but I took care of them to the best of my ability.
Why is it different for someone of a different sexual orientation? It all boils down to the patient. Here is someone sick in front of you. Does it matter how they have sex? Does it matter what they believe? Do you have the right to play God and decide who lives and who dies? No matter who our patients are, I believe that we have the legal and ethical responsibility to care for them to their last breath. We didn't come into nursing to pick and choose those that we will care for, and politics does not belong at the patient's bedside. Instead, nurses should care for who they are charged with -- criminal, homosexual, black, white, Islamic, or whatever. No one should be denied care, and that includes the modern day lepers, those with a different sexual identity.
References
Michigan House Bill No. 5958; Accessed January 9, 2015
http://www.legislature.mi.gov/documents/2013-2014/billengrossed/House/pdf/2014-HEBH-5958.pdf
Snopes; Slake Michigan; Accessed January 9, 2015
snopes.com: Michigan Exempts Emergency Medical Personnel from Treating Gay People?
Is there anyone on the board who was a nurses at the beginning of the AIDS crisis?Many medical professionals from EMT's to nurses,physicians and undertaker refused to care for those patients. A pharmacist can REFUSE to fill my script due to his own beliefs and get away with it....It's total unethical BS,imho.
Yes indeed. There's a whole thread on it.
https://allnurses.com/nurse-colleague-patient/aids-during-the-915983-page2.html
#18 is my story
Why has the Republican led legislature in Michigan even forwarded this bill at all? What is their agenda? How does this proposed legislation improve life in Michigan for the citizens?Just in case it wasn't clear in the article, I don't feel it would be ethical either. I think it is important to know what this bill is about and how it may affect healthcare. Unfortunately, this IS a question that will be asked in the future. It has the potential to be a problem, and medical professionals have to be ready to act against it.Lynda
What religion prohibits you from saving the life of someone you disagree with on a unrelated, separate issue?? The whole concept is ridiculous. What's next - I hate your political views so sorry, not getting that blood transfusion from me? Argh.
Ah, but wouldn't it be entertaining to see someone demand that their unit of PRBCs be "Republican Only", please? How about a donor designating their blood "To Be Used for a Democratic Patient Only"? :)
It would be nice to think so, wouldn't it? Back when HIV was a brand new thing (and still being called "Gay Acquired Immune Deficiency"), "religious" nurses often refused to care for HIV and AIDs patients "because they're immoral" even when the patient was a post-partum mother who presumably got it from the 37 transfusions she recieved for post partum bleeding. The nurses I knew were usually Fundamentalist Christians -- atheists, agnostics, Catholics and Jews did care for the patients without complaint.
Ruby, how do you know fundamentalist Christians refused and that others you listed did not? Thanks for any documentation you can provide.
Ruby, how do you know fundamentalist Christians refused and that others you listed did not? Thanks for any documentation you can provide.
I am sure there are statistics available regarding that but it would take lots of digging.The fundamental Christian movement wasn't a thing at the time of the beginning of the AIDS crisis,was it? In my memory the fear was persuasive across all walks of life.I cared for several patients with AIDS and remember them being neglected by staff,no-one wanted to enter the room,including food and housekeeping services.The Bible belt did respond with excessive fear and hate,I do remember that...
The law that nurses are obligated to follow is the Patient Bill of Rights; the patient shall not be denied approipriate care on the basis of race, religion, national origin, sex, age, handicap, marital status, sexual preference, or source of payment. The Patient Bill of Rights supercedes individual religious freedom. That being said, a nurse can utilize 'conscientious objection' and request permission from their employer to refrain from providing care, because a practice or procedure conflicts with their religious beliefs, for example assisting with abortions. The nurse should reveal their conscientous objection before their employment starts, so that an employer can ensure the patients right to appropriate care is not denied.
Ruby, how do you know fundamentalist Christians refused and that others you listed did not? Thanks for any documentation you can provide.
I knew the people I was working with. I knew who refused and who took care of the HIV patients without complaint. I knew who went to the fundamentalist Christian church, who was Jewish, who was Catholic and (usually) who was athesist or agnostic. We talked about such things back then. The fundamentalist Christian nurses -- and there were a few around, even back then -- stated that they would not take care of our HIV patients "because they are immoral."
There will always be someone you don't agree with, even down to deeply held moral beliefs. I personally was always a little bothered with things like pharmacists who refused to fill prescriptions for birth control or hospitals that would rather do an invasive surgery than give a woman medication that will cause a miscarriage of a non viable pregnancy because "they're abortions." I feel very much the same here. No matter what my deeply held belief is, I cannot make someone else believe it by legislating it so, nor is it appropriate for me to try. To refuse someone appropriate medical treatment over their sexuality/gender is, in in my belief, along the same lines as blackmail.
StayLost, BSN, RN
166 Posts
"Transvestite" is not a sexual orientation.