Making Sense Out of Bioethics
When Ideology Corrupts Science and Medicine
Some physicians and researchers fail to see
the important role of ethics and religion in
the world of medical science. Others are
clearly ready to sideline religion
altogether when it comes to discussing the
moral values that should guide the conduct
of science and scientists.
Recently I came across some published
remarks by Professor Richard Sloan of
Columbia University dealing with the
relationship between medicine and religion.
He notes that even though abortion is a
“perfectly legal procedure,” some physicians
withhold information about the practice from
their patients, claiming their decision is
justified by their religious beliefs. He
goes on to express his displeasure that some
states have enacted conscience clauses, “to
permit such religiously motivated
malpractice.” He even states that in some
parts of the country, patients may have “no
alternative to physicians who think that
their primary obligation is to honor their
religious convictions rather than act in the
best interests of their patients.”
His remarks expose a real tension between
those who believe modern healthcare should
be guided by the values of an
ethically-informed conscience, and those who
believe that it should be driven by various
ideologies. One ideology widely encountered
in the field of medicine today promotes the
direct taking of human life through
abortion, euthanasia, and embryo research,
and neglects longstanding codes of medical
ethics that insist that the first duty of
the physician and the researcher is to “do
no harm.”
When a physician directly takes the life of
another human being, he is, in fact,
committing medical malpractice, and acting
directly against his central healing mission
as a doctor. Abortion, by its very nature,
can never be compatible with promoting human
dignity. It never respects the human person.
It is invariably at odds with the best
interests of patients. As a component of a
broader anti-life ideology, it represents a
corrosive force in hospital clinics,
research laboratories and other institutions
of higher learning. When ideology begins to
shun sound ethical thinking rooted in
religion, we need to be very concerned.
I remember a story my father once told about
the corrosive power of ideology, something
he had witnessed first-hand living under
communism, and working as a physics
professor at the University of Warsaw. To
enter the university and study physics, all
applicants were required to pass three oral
exams, one in physics, one in mathematics
and the third in something called “Politics
and Marxism.” All the exams were held in a
single room with different tables for each
subject.
One day as my father and another faculty
member were interviewing candidates, a young
man approached their table. It became
immediately clear that he was very
intelligent and gifted, and would make an
excellent student. They discovered that he
had been unable to gain admission to the
university for the past two years, because —
even though he did brilliantly on the
physics and mathematics exams — he couldn’t
seem to pass the Politics and Marxism exam.
My father and his colleague had seen this
before. The communist party members who
conducted these interviews would target
applicants who might be religious in their
outlook, asking them pointed and
discriminatory questions they could not
answer in good conscience, and then fail
them on the exam. Fortunately for the young
man, there was a policy that any faculty
member was free to move among tables and ask
questions during any other department’s
entrance examination. So when the hopeful
student approached the Politics and Marxism
table, my father and his friend went over
and sat down, one on each side of the
communist party member running the
interview.
The first question was: “Please explain how
the Church is backwards and oppresses
people.” The fellow remained silent, since
he was a Catholic himself. My father and his
colleague stepped in after a moment, and
said, “Well, it’s clear that he didn’t grasp
the question. Allow me to repeat the
question for him: ‘What does Marxism
teach about how the Catholic Church is
backwards and oppresses people?’”
The fellow was then able to jump in and
provide a correct answer, by affirming that
the ideology of Marxism did teach
thus-and-so. The questions and their
refinement by my father and his colleague
continued, and the communist party official
became visibly agitated. The fellow ended up
passing the Politics and Marxism exam, along
with the physics and mathematics exams, and
was admitted to the university. Although the
story had a happy ending, the brilliant
young man had lost two years of a successful
career because of the closed-minded,
anti-religious ideologies prevalent in the
academic environment of the university under
communism.
In academic settings today, we still
encounter powerful anti-religious
ideologies, as Professor Sloan’s comments
remind us, and they can result in even more
damaging consequences than merely delaying
admission to the university. As anti-life
ideologies, for example, become tolerated
and even promoted as part of medicine, not
only do many humans end up being destroyed
along the way by abortion, euthanasia, in
vitro fertilization or embryo research,
but those
clinicians and researchers who decline to
participate in these practices “feel the
heat” and worry their careers may be at risk.
To force health care and research to embrace
such anti-life ideologies is to warp and
eventually corrupt modern medicine
altogether. Instances of such corruption
have happened only too often in the past as
professors, researchers, and physicians have
chosen to minimize the demands of an ethical
conscience and to adopt seriously misguided
ideologies. Codes of medical ethics like the
Hippocratic Oath, the Nuremberg Code, and
the Declaration of Helsinki came into
existence after various misguided ideologies
gained a foothold, and the medical
establishment suffered a core meltdown,
allowing doctors and researchers to
participate in crimes against humanity.
History sadly reminds us how quickly our
human conscience, when deprived of its
divine and religious dimensions, becomes
untethered in a tumultuous sea of
ideological temptations, and can end up on
the glide path towards crime and atrocity.
Those who strive to protect the ethical
integrity of medicine through conscience
protection laws, and those medical
professionals who ardently pursue an upright
personal conscience by resisting, among
other things, maiming or killing actions
directed against early human life, provide
an essential witness, and a critical
counterbalance, to powerful and destructive
ideologies that are operative in academia
and health care today.
Rev. Tadeusz Pacholczyk, Ph.D. earned his
doctorate in neuroscience from Yale and did
post-doctoral work at Harvard. He is a
priest of the diocese of Fall River, MA, and
serves as the Director of Education at The
National Catholic Bioethics Center in
Philadelphia. See www.ncbcenter.org