Today the Iowa Board of Medicine issued a press release announcing the
formation of an ad hoc committee to study the use of telemedicine in
Iowa.
The following is a statement from Operation Rescue President Troy
Newman in response to that announcement:
We were aware that the Iowa Board of
Medicine formed this ad hoc committee because we attended the Board
meeting on Aug. 20 where it was announced.
We are glad that telemedicine will be
studied and hope that the committee will especially focus on the misuse
of telemedicine by Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, which
distributes dangerous abortion pills through a remote controlled push
button system that denies the patient access to examination by a
licensed physician as well as any meaningful doctor/patient
relationship.
However, due to the way nearly 30
citizens were treated at the last Board meeting, we have concerns that
the Board may not give our concerns for the health and safety of women
fair consideration.
At the Aug. 20 meeting in which the
Board solicited public comment on telemedicine, the Board, without
notice, limited access to the meeting to only six people, then limited
the total length of comments on telemedicine to only 10 minutes. The
rest of the citizens, some who drove several hours to be heard, were
forced by the Board to stand outside in the rain. There were health
care professionals, attorneys, clergy, and leaders of a number of
different groups that represented the concerns of thousands of Iowans
that simply were not heard, or were limited in some cases to mere
seconds of comment. Despite whatever the Board may say, that act
clearly communicated to us that the Board is completely uninterested in
hearing our concerns.
In addition, we have received
documentation regarding the relationship between certain IBM staff
members and Planned Parenthood of the Heartland that further erodes our
confidence that the Board is capable of sound judgment regarding any
issue related to Planned Parenthood. We plan to release our
documentation on Monday.