Conscientious objection in the legal context

Authors

  • Mariela Mautone Universidad de Barcelona, Unidad Académica de Bioética. Magíster en Bioética y Derecho. Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Unidad Académica de Bioética. Profesora Agregada
  • Hugo Rodríguez Almada Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Unidad Académica de Bioética, Departamento de Medicina Legal. Director, Médico legista

Keywords:

LEGAL ABORTION, CONSCIENCE, PHYSICIANS, MEDICAL ETHICS, BIOETICS, BIOETHICAL ISSUES

Abstract

Act Nº 18.987 and Decree 375/012 brought up a debate involving women's right to voluntary interruption of pregnancy and the right of physicians to refrain from performing it, due to moral consciousness issues. From a secular and bioethical perspective, this article aims to determine arguments seeking for minimal consensus that will respect the moral values and principles of all actors.
Conscientious objection is the refusal to perform certain legal, enforceable actions in order to avoid a serious lesion in the person´s own conscience. It evidences respect to freedom of ideas and religion by a state under the rule of law. It is an individual act that does not aim to change the law, and neither does it seek for others to revise their decision. It is different from civil disobedience since it consists of a group of people who state they do not want to observe a legal provision, it aims to abolish it and to exert a group pressure on the government.
From the point of view of the principlism bioethics: a) there is respect for women's autonomy who decide to interrupt their pregnancy according to the legal provisions in force; b) access of women to voluntary interruption of pregnancy under the health team control is connected to the beneficence and nonmaleficence principles; c) the application of the law in the entire National Integrated Health System guarantees women's universal access to these services, according to the justice principle.

 

References

(1) Comité de Bioética de España. Opinión del Comité de Bioética de España sobre la objeción de conciencia en sanidad. Disponible en: http://www.comitedebioetica.es/documentacion/docs/es/La%20objecion%20de%20conciencia%202n%20sanidad.pdf [Consulta: 5 febrero 2013]
(2) Casado M. Fundamentos éticos de las regulaciones sanitarias, objeción de conciencia y normativa bioética española. En: Lolas F, ed. Dimensiones éticas de las regulaciones en salud. Santiago de Chile: CIEB, 2009.p.43-60.
(3) Aparisi Miralles A, López Guzmán J. El derecho a la objeción de conciencia en el supuesto del aborto: de la fundamentación filosófico-jurídica a su reconocimiento legal. Pers Bioet 2006; 1(26):35-51.
(4) American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologist. Committee on Ethics. The limits of conscientious refusal in reproductive medicine. ACOG Committee Opinion 2007; 385:1-6. Disponible en: http://www.acog.org/Resources_And_Publications/Committee_Opinions/Committee_on_Ethics/The_Limits_of_Conscientious_Refusal_in_Reproductive_Medicine [Consulta: 5 febrero 2013].
(5) Diniz D. Harm Reduction and Abortion. Dev World Bioeth 2012; 12:(3):ii.

Published

2013-03-31

How to Cite

1.
Mautone M, Rodríguez Almada H. Conscientious objection in the legal context. Rev. Méd. Urug. [Internet]. 2013 Mar. 31 [cited 2024 Nov. 21];29(1):40-2. Available from: https://revista.rmu.org.uy/index.php/rmu/article/view/298

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