Fr Kevin Doran was speaking to The Irish Times as the board prepares to meet in the coming weeks to discuss how or whether the hospital will abide by the legislation.
The Mater Misericordiae University
Hospital is one of 25 “appropriate institutions” named in the Act where
abortions may be carried out to save the life of a pregnant woman.
A Catholic voluntary hospital, part-owned by the Sisters of Mercy who founded it in 1861, the Mater is managed by the board of governors independent of the HSE.
In
its mission statement, the hospital says that by caring for the sick,
“we participate in the healing ministry of Jesus Christ”.
Fr
Doran, who sits on the board of governors and the board of directors
of the Mater, said it was “incumbent on the hospital to consider its
position on the Act . . . 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.”
Serious discussion
Asked his view of what should happen if the board were to decide it would comply with the legislation, Fr Doran said: “I suppose I can assume there would be very serious discussion between the Archbishop [of Dublin Dr Diarmuid Martin] and the management of the hospital.”
Sr Eugene Nolan,
nurse tutor and member of the board of directors, described the
situation facing the hospital as “very, very grave”, adding the
legislation “is being imposed on us.
“It is
against our ethos. The main thing is we have an obligation to preserve
the ethos of the hospital and still try and do the best we can. [The
legislation] will have to be looked at very carefully.”
A
spokesman for the hospital said it had no formal position as yet on the
legislation. “It is going to be discussed by the board of governors in
the coming weeks.”
Single-member company
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.
St
Vincent’s University Hospital, Dublin, is also a Catholic voluntary
hospital, part- owned and part-managed by the Sisters of Charity. It is
also named in the legislation as an “appropriate institution” to perform
abortions.
Its mission, says the hospital
website, is to provide care and treatment “through the continuance and
furtherance of the ethos, aims and purposes of the Congregation of the
Religious Sisters of Charity”.
A spokesman for St Vincent’s Healthcare Group said it would “as always, be following the law of the land”.