Kansas Governor Sebelius Vetoes a Bill Requiring Doctors to Tell Why They Performed Abortions
According to the Joplin Globe, Sebelius said doing so would open private medical records violating patients' privacy. The proposed bill also required doctors to say why the performed the abortions. This information would then be given to the Department of Health and environment and subsequently published in the annual report. Yet another privacy violation.
Abortion opponents had hoped publishing such data would give legislators ammunition to set policy and influence public opinion. It was included in the legislature's final spending bill. Though the governor signed the bill, she used her individual item veto power in spending bills saying it would require doctors to answer "open-ended" questions and reveal information about patients' medical conditions.
"Rather than collecting sound data that is able to be properly analyzed and protected, this proviso is likely to have little substantive effect, yet opens up patients' private medical information to public viewing," Sebelius wrote in her veto message. "This measure runs counter to Kansans' strong belief in the importance of medical privacy."
Mary Kay Culp, executive director of Kansans for Life, calls Sebelius' statements concerning privacy "an outright lie," saying doctors use patient numbers rather than names in reporting information. "This was the very, very, very, very least she could have done to protect unborn children and their mothers, and once again she couldn't do it," Culp said.
Sebelius, a supporter of abortion rights, vetoed a bill last year requiring abortion reporting. Culp criticized Sebelius saying "She traded the lives of nearly born children, and safety and high standards of health care for women through required diagnosis, in exchange for political advocacy for the abortion industry that has supported her politically for years."
Kansas Governor Sebelius Vetoes a Bill Requiring Doctors to Tell Why They Performed Abortions
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