Court Case begins for Norwegian Doctor Fired for Exercising Right to Conscience

Country: Norway

Date of incident: June 1, 2016


Katarzyna Jachimowicz, a Polish family physician working in Norway, became the first medical professional in the country fired because she exercised her conscience rights by refusing to administer abortifacients.

From LifeSiteNews:

Jachimowicz started working in 2010 in the municipality of Sauherad in Norway, a country with a taxpayer-funded health care system. As “Gość Niedzielny” reports, her husband (also a medical doctor) had dreamt of going to Norway, and she wanted to experience the country’s high-quality family medicine. Jachimowicz explained that family medicine in Poland is somewhat different because it includes some psychology and gynecology and requires some surgical skills.

She worked for more than four years as a family doctor at the Family Clinic in Norway and there were no complaints about her work or her language skills. As a Catholic, she brought a strong sense of Christian morality. This revealed itself in not referring patients for abortions and not inserting intrauterine devices (IUDs), which can act as abortifacients. But her ethical stance never interfered with the functioning of the clinic.

From the beginning, her objections were not only clear to her employer but also accepted. “Life begins at conception and I did not want to take part in destroying it,” she explained during a meeting with the doctors and local authorities who hired her. In other words, those were the conditions of her contract, which both sides agreed upon. “All present agreed to my conditions, but I did not ask for written confirmation, knowing that an oral agreement is valid as well,” Jachimowicz told LifeSiteNews.

According to Jachimowicz, things became worse for family doctors after a discussion was orchestrated in the media by liberal circles. The media insinuated that three teenagers had trouble getting birth control from a Catholic doctor. However, Dr. Gunnar G. Johnson explained to LifeSiteNews that those teenagers never contacted him for contraceptives. "The actual fact is that contraceptives were provided free of charge from the nurse next door who routinely provides reproductive counseling to teenagers," he said. However, about 50 news providers nationwide picked up this false story and reported it as "shocking news".

In 2014, the legal situation worsened, with the nearly complete elimination of the conscience clause for family doctors. It is now forbidden for them to refuse any form of birth control, including the insertion of IUDs, which are not considered abortifacient by Norwegian government. Some believe that if a woman is not pregnant when the device is inserted, there is no abortion. However, some IUDs can cause abortion when a woman becomes pregnant after the insertion of this device.

Jachimowicz said family doctors could technically refuse the insertion of the IUD claiming lack of skill, and this would be accepted. “So what’s punishable is not lack of skills, but the existence of beliefs, religion, and conscience,” she said. She did not want to use the loophole, but rather to work according to her beliefs. She was asked to leave or abandon her conscience.

However, she did not want to surrender and was fired in December 2015 by the municipality of Sauherad, headed by Cecilie Stangeby of the health department. The termination papers were signed by municipal official Hans Erik Utne. They did not respond to requests for an interview.

Her 900 patients now find themselves without a permanent primary doctor. They have to go to the remaining personnel, already overwhelmed with work. Each time, the sick bounce between different doctors who have little knowledge of their medical history. The authorities ignored the patient-doctor relationships, which are built over time and based on mutual trust and respect —all in the name of a few healthy women who potentially had to spend few minutes waiting for another doctor to insert an IUD. The authorities claimed that these women were under great stress and had to wait in line, Jachimowicz added.

After initial isolation, Jachimowicz received help from different sources. Catholic and Protestant patients, a Muslim family, and her colleagues wrote letters to Parliament and the Minister of Health Bent Høye. None have heard back from the authorities. Høye did not answer to request for an interview.

In June 2016, her court case was initiated, the first hearing of the conscience objection in Norway’s courts.

Source: LifeSiteNews