Why women will find it harder to get an abortion if the religious discrimination bill becomes law

Women may need to shop around for a new doctor if the first one refuses to perform an abortion for religious reasons.

Health practitioners who object to performing abortions may have stronger legal protections under the Religious Discrimination Bill.

Health practitioners who object to performing abortions may have stronger legal protections under the Religious Discrimination Bill. Source: Getty

If the Religious Discrimination Bill passes into law, women may find it harder to get an abortion.

That’s because health practitioners with an objection to performing the procedure on religious grounds may have stronger legal protection and may not be compelled to refer women to an alternative provider.

This may lead women to consult multiple services, if available, before finding a doctor willing to perform the procedure.

Who does the bill cover and where?

In the new bill, the term “health practitioner” has a broad meaning. It includes doctors, nurses, midwives and pharmacists. If the bill passes into law, it would apply to health practitioners around Australia. This means it has the potential to override current state and territory laws protecting women seeking abortions.

At the moment, in states such as Victoria and NSW, health professionals may conscientiously object to performing abortions but must refer women to another service.

However, this new bill may override state laws by allowing health professionals with a conscientious objection to refuse to refer them.
There are suggestions the bill should be amended to strike a better balance between religious rights and women’s right to access abortion.
There are suggestions the bill should be amended to strike a better balance between religious rights and women’s right to access abortion. Source: Getty
The bill may also restrict the ability of private hospitals or private clinics to enforce a workplace policy that requires health practitioners to refer patients to other health practitioners if they object to abortion themselves.

If the new bill becomes law, the only situations where the health professional would be compelled to provide abortion is if his or her employer would suffer “unjustifiable adverse impact” or if the patient would suffer “unjustifiable adverse impact”.

It is unclear how the courts will interpret these rules.

The new bill may make existing matters worse

The bill may also exacerbate problems some women already face in accessing an abortion.

For instance, in Tasmania, some women are forced to travel to Victoria due to the difficulty of accessing medical practitioners to perform the procedure in their home state.

In 2018, a Cricket Australia employee Angela Williamson spoke out after being forced to travel from Hobart to Melbourne for this reason. After speaking out on Twitter about the poor access to abortion services in Tasmania, she lost her job.

Conscientious objection is already a problem

Not all doctors act legally under existing legislation. A recent study focusing on Victorian providers found doctors had:

  • broken the existing law by not referring women to another provider if they objected to performing an abortion
  • attempted to make women feel guilty about requesting an abortion
  • attempted to delay women’s access to abortion services, or
  • claimed an objection for reasons other than conscience.
The study also showed how government phone staff authorising abortion pills, pharmacists, institutions like private hospitals and political groups all used or misused conscientious objection. They either delayed or blocked access to existing services or contributed to the actual lack of abortion providers and services, via lobbying the public or government.
The study found misuse occurred partly because people do not have to justify or register their conscientious objection. So there is no way of knowing if someone’s conscientious objection is a genuine or deeply, consistently held religious position.

The new bill will likely make these types of situations more common.

Right to religious freedom vs right to health care

The bill is controversial because it elevates the protection of religious freedom above other rights, such as the right to health care for women seeking an abortion.

Hugh de Kretser, executive director of the Human Right Law Centre, says Australia needs stronger protections from discrimination for people of faith, but the current bill introduces unjustified carve-outs.
The Human Rights Centre's Hugh de Kretser.
The Human Rights Centre's Hugh de Kretser. Source: AAP
"(This allows) for people to express discriminatory views and to override state and territory protections which ensure fair treatment, particularly for women accessing abortion services," he said.

Adrianne Walters, senior lawyer at the Human Rights Law Centre, says the bill will undermine women’s reproductive health.

"In some jurisdictions, like South Australia and Western Australia, it will allow doctors to abandon their patients," she said.
"The bill unjustifiably prioritises a doctor’s personal religious beliefs over the right of women to access the healthcare they need."

In 2018, an International Women’s Health Coalition study found a failure to provide abortions to women has terrible impacts by placing “patients at risk of discrimination, physical and emotional harm, and financial stress”. Those possible harms included death.

Elizabeth Shi is a Lecturer, Graduate School of Business and Law at RMIT University.

Ariella Gordon is a Research Assistant, Graduate School of Business and Law at RMIT University.


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4 min read
Published 13 September 2019 12:12pm
Updated 13 September 2019 1:33pm
By Elizabeth Shi, Ariella Gordon
Source: The Conversation


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