Bishop prepared to remove rogue hospital’s Catholic status

21 Dec 2010

By The Record

WASHINGTON (CNS) – Citing “ongoing communication and attempts to rectify the situation,” Phoenix Bishop Thomas Olmsted has extended from 17 December to 21 December a deadline he had set for a local Catholic hospital to comply with three demands related to the Church’s ethical directives for health care.

olmsted.jpg
Bishop Thomas Olmsted of Phoenix, who said Mercy Sr Margaret Mary McBride, former vice president of mission integration at St Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Clinic in Phoenix, was “automatically excommunicated” because she concurred in an ethics committee decision to abort the child of a gravely ill woman at the hospital in 2009. Photo: CNS

The Bishop set the new deadline for Catholic Healthcare West, the San Francisco-based health system that includes St Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix, to agree that the termination of a pregnancy at the hospital in late 2009 violated the “Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services” and “so will never occur again” there.
The other requirements outlined in a 22 November letter were for Catholic Healthcare West to agree to “a review and certification process” concerning its compliance with the ethical directives and for the medical staff of St Joseph’s to receive “ongoing formation” on the directives, overseen by the National Catholic Bioethics Centre or the diocese’s medical ethics board. If the requirements were not met by 17 December, Bishop Olmsted said in the November letter, he would be forced “to notify the Catholic faithful that St Joseph’s Hospital no longer qualifies as a ‘Catholic’ hospital because of its failure to acknowledge the Bishop’s right and duty to judge whether the (directives) are interpreted and implemented correctly.”
After the letter from Bishop Olmsted to Lloyd H Dean, president of Catholic Healthcare West, was published on 15 December by the Arizona Republic newspaper, the Diocese of Phoenix neither confirmed nor disputed the contents of the letter, saying it was “considered to be private and confidential.”
“The Bishop and his staff are working together with Catholic Healthcare West and St Joseph’s Hospital to find the best way to provide authentic Catholic health care in accordance with the Church’s teaching,” the 15 December statement said. The case under discussion in the dispute involved a woman, who has not been identified, who was 11 weeks pregnant and suffering from pulmonary hypertension, a condition that the hospital said carried a near-certain risk of death for the mother if the pregnancy continued.
A nun who concurred in an ethics committee’s decision to abort the child was “automatically excommunicated” by her action, Bishop Olmsted said in May. Mercy Sr Margaret Mary McBride also was reassigned from her position as vice president of mission integration at the hospital after news surfaced about the abortion. She remains at the hospital but has declined to comment on the case.
St Joseph’s Hospital said in a 15 December statement that dialogue with the Bishop was continuing “and we hope to achieve a resolution. We believe that all life is sacred. In this case, we saved the only life we could save, which was the mother’s”.
The withdrawal of a hospital’s Catholic identification would not be unprecedented.
Bishop Robert Vasa of Baker, Oregon, announced in February that St Charles Medical Center in Bend had “gradually moved away” from the Church’s ethical directives and can no longer be called Catholic.
As a result of that decision, Mass is no longer celebrated in the hospital’s chapel and all items considered Catholic were removed from the hospital and returned to the church.
The hospital retained the St Charles name and a cross remains atop the building.
In his November letter, Bishop Olmsted outlined similar consequences. A revocation of his endorsement of St Joseph’s Hospital would necessitate removal of the Blessed Sacrament from all chapels and tabernacles at St Joseph’s Medical Centre, a prohibition of all Masses celebrated in chapels within it and public advisory from the Bishop’s office that St Joseph’s no longer qualifies as a ‘Catholic’ hospital.