
The Trump administration on Thursday announced new rules to make it easier for religious health care workers to object to providing care and procedures like abortions and sterilization that conflict with their religious or moral beliefs.
Why it matters: This is a top priority for religious conservatives who are closely allied with the Trump administration, which has prioritized expanding religious liberty protections. But critics argue that the administration is giving medical professionals a license to discriminate and that the rule would weaken protections for vulnerable patients, including gay and transgender individuals.
Details: The rule will go into effect in 60 days from its final publication and will be enforced by the HHS' Office of Civil Rights.
- It mirrors similar efforts by the administration that protect conscience rights in the medical field. Last month, the administration signaled its intention to soon roll back an Obama-era policy extended to transgender patients. That policy has been blocked in the courts.
What they're saying:
Go deeper: Trump administration poised to rescind transgender health protections