The Mater Hospital in Dublin has said it will comply with the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013.
In
a brief statement issued yesterday the hospital said it would comply
with the Act, which sets out the circumstances where a termination of
pregnancy may be performed.
The statement says:
“The Mater Hospital has carefully considered the Act. The Hospital’s
priority is to be at the frontier of compassion, concern and clinical
care for all our patients. Having regard to that duty, the Hospital will
comply with the law as provided for in the act.”
The hospital’s compliance with the
legislation came into question during the summer when a member of its
board of directors said it could “not comply” with the legislation as it
ran counter to its Catholic ethos. Fr Kevin Doran,
who sits on both the board of directors and the board of governors
would not comment this afternoon on the hospital’s decision or his
future involvement in it.
The Mater Misericordiae University Hospital is a Catholic voluntary hospital and was founded by the Sisters
of Mercy in 1861. In its mission statement, the hospital says that by
caring for the sick, “we participate in the healing ministry of Jesus
Christ”.
Though it is named in the Act as one of
25 “appropriate institutions” for the termination of pregnancy, Fr Doran
said during the summer: “The Mater can’t carry out abortions because it
goes against its ethos. I would be very concerned that the Minister
[for Health, James Reilly] sees fit to make it impossible for hospitals
to have their own ethos.
“The issue is broader
than just abortion. What’s happening is the Minister is saying hospitals
are not entitled to have an ethos.”
A spokesman
said the hospital’s board and management had consulted “widely across
the hospital” since the enactment of the legislation in July. The issue
had also been discussed at board level.
When
asked yesterday about the hospital’s decision, Fr Doran said: “I’m not
going to comment on anything. This has just happened.”
Asked
if he was going to remain on as a member of the hospital’s boards of
governors and directors, again said: “I am not going to comment on
anything.”
He had said in August that if the
hospital were to decide to comply with the legislation he assumed there
“would be very serious discussion between the Archbishop [of Dublin Dr
Diarmuid Martin] and the management of the hospital.”
The Mater hospital is a single-member company.
Its parent company is the Mater Misericordiae and the Children’s University Hospitals (Temple St) Ltd.
Its
website says the majority of the members of the parent company are
Sisters of Mercy and the remaining members represent the Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin, the Catholic Nurses’ Guild of Ireland,
the Society of St Vincent de Paul and the medical consultants of Mater
Misericordiae University Hospital and the Children’s University
Hospital.
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