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Catholic bishops to amend directives on health care; CHA will offer advice

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During its spring plenary assembly in Orlando, Florida, in June the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops voted to give the Committee on Doctrine permission to prepare an amendment to the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services relating to the care of transgender people.

On June 16, CHA issued a press release expressing its intention to work with the bishops’ conference to ensure that the revisions will allow Catholic health care to continue to provide high-quality patient care that respects church teaching, federal and state laws and the human dignity of all.

The press release, which quoted Sr. Mary Haddad, RSM, CHA president and CEO, affirmed that the ministry “welcomes and cares for transgender patients, or those experiencing gender dysphoria, with the same care and respect as any patient in our facilities.” Sr. Mary said in

Transgender care

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Association of Catholic Chaplains, and Jamez Terry, a chaplain with the Children’s Hospital at Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage. Webinar moderators were Jill Fisk, CHA director of mission services; and Fr. Charles Bouchard, OP, who retired in late June as CHA senior director of theology and sponsorship.

Discernment and action

During the webinar, Fisk and Fr. Bouchard explained that CHA in recent years has been in discernment on how to advise the ministry when it comes to care of transgender patients.

Four years ago, CHA and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops formed a task force on the subject. CHA produced a document on transgender people and the church. The conference’s Committee on Doctrine has been using that document as well as other input to guide its work in this area. In March, the conference’s committee issued a statement providing moral criteria to ministry providers for “discerning which medical interventions promote the authentic good of the human person and which are in fact injurious,” particularly when it comes to care of people with gender dysphoria or gender incongruence.

the release that there is still much to learn about the complexities of gender dysphoria and the use of different treatments to address the condition.

She said that as the bishops’ conference navigates the revision of the Ethical and Religious Directives in reference to the treatment of transgender patients in ministry facilities, they should “engage in broad consultation with patients suffering from gender dysphoria and providers who care for them to ensure the health of the whole person.”

CHA has convened standing advisory groups of experts that have been providing input on transgender care to CHA. Those multidisciplinary groups remain available to advise CHA and the bishops’ conference, including during the revision of the Ethical and Religious Directives

The groups have expertise in ethics, moral theology, medicine, law and public relations.

In the statement, the committee said Catholic health care facilities are to “provide the best medical care, as well as Christ’s compassionate accompaniment, to all patients, no matter who they may be or from what condition they may be suffering” but that the means used “must respect the fundamental order of the human body” or else the human person will not be helped, but rather harmed.

CHA has formed a subcommittee that is working through the association’s Spiritual Care Advisory Council to study how best to ensure that ministry facilities provide appropriate spiritual care services to transgender people. The three presenters of the June webinar are on that subcommittee.

The subcommittee has been surveying some ministry facilities and convening groups of selected ministry leaders for discussion. Fisk said the subcommittee’s main takeaway is that it is essential that the ministry provides all people who need spiritual care with those services and the services should address the needs in a specific and holistic way. “We don’t need to re-create our spiritual care services but to bring them forth” to all who need them, Fisk said.

Marginalization

Sr. Derouen said that based on her twoplus decades working closely with transgender people, it is her belief that being transgender is a medical condition, and not a personal choice, and since it is a medical condition, it would be incorrect to refer to it as a pathology or as sinning against God. She said in today’s heated political climate, incorrect narratives are promoted about transgender people such as that they are suffering from a pathology and are at war with God. Sr. Derouen said some people pretend transgender people don’t exist. She said denying the existence of transgender people contributes to their marginalization. That in turn causes stigma, shame, and secrecy.

She explained that people who are transgender generally move through several stages as they discover the gender they are meant to be. Those stages include false integration, disintegration and reintegration of a person’s identity.

In describing the stages, she said the most fundamental spiritual question for everyone is “Who am I?” She said that question takes a lifetime to answer. Sr. Derouen described a common pattern for how many transgender people process that question. First, they try to be who everyone expects them to be — false integration. Then they reach the point where they can’t pretend to be who they aren’t — disintegration. Then finally they claim to live in harmony with who they know themselves to be — reintegration.

“It’s a holy journey, as they become closer to who they are,” Sr. Derouen said.

She added, “They deserve to be treated with dignity.”

Pioneers

Terry, the children’s hospital chaplain, became part of the transgender community two decades ago. Terry said it has been clear to him in the ensuing years that it is a common experience among people in this community to have had a religious background and to have spiritual longings and to be undertaking “deep soul work as they discern who they are and who they are meant to be.” Becoming aware of this, Terry said, “I discerned my own call” to be a chaplain who helps people with their spiritual challenges.

Cohen Moore wrapped up the discussion by acknowledging that the church and its bishops are navigating numerous complex questions around the specifics of providing various types of care to transgender people. She said it is important for ministry providers to stay abreast of that work and its implications.

While there is ambiguity and uncertainty in these matters now, Cohen Moore said ministry providers should proceed with love. “It’s a journey, and we’re pioneering in this area,” she said. “In light of Catholic social teaching we are to live into our set of competencies” — the competencies that have been established for chaplains.

She said, “Our competencies say we are to provide spiritual care that respects differences.”

To access the webinar, visit chausa.org/ store/meeting?ID=5367 (free to members).

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