CDF answers question about
hysterectomy in certain cases
The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has published
a response to a question concerning the morality of performing a hysterectomy
in specific “extreme cases.”
By Christopher Wells
On Thursday, the Vatican published the response of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) to a question concerning the
liceity of performing a hysterectomy in certain cases.
Morally licit
The CDF’s response deals with the very specific case “when
the uterus is found to be irreversibly in such a state that it is no longer suitable
for procreation and medical experts have reached the certainty that an eventual
pregnancy will bring about a spontaneous abortion before the fetus is able to
arrive at a viable state.” In those cases, the Congregation says, it can be
morally licit to remove the uterus, because “it does not regard sterilization.”
Regarding extreme cases
In an illustrative note appended to the response, the CDF
says the question “regards some extreme cases, recently submitted” to the
Congregation. It goes on to explain how these cases differ from other
situations where a hysterectomy might be considered, which an earlier decision
of the Congregation had determined would not be morally licit.
Specifically, in 1993, the CDF issued a series
of responses stating that it is morally licit to
remove the uterus “when there is a grave and present danger to the life or
health of the mother”; but that hysterectomy or tubal ligation (“uterine
isolation”) are not licit “insofar as they are direct methods
of sterilization.”
A different issue
The cases addressed in the present response, while also
concerning hysterectomy “present a different issue from that which was examined
in 1993,” the Congregation explains, precisely “because they regard situations
in which procreation is no longer possible.” That is, “removing a reproductive
organ incapable of bringing a pregnancy to term should not therefore be
qualified as direct sterilization, which is and remains intrinsically illicit
as an end and as a means.”
Further considerations
The Congregation notes that making such a diagnosis remains
a medical question. “From a moral point of view,” however, “one must ask if the
highest degree of certainty that medicine can reach has been reached, and in
this sense the response given is valid for the question, as it has been
proposed in good faith.”
Finally, the CDF says that although a hysterectomy is
permissible in such circumstances, it does not exclude other options,
emphasizing that it falls to the spouses, “in dialogue with doctors and their
spiritual guide, to choose the path to follow, applying the general criteria of
the gradualness of medical intervention to their case and to their
circumstances.”
The response of the CDF published today was approved by Pope
Francis in an audience granted to the Prefect of the Congregation, Cardinal
Luis Ladaria, SJ, on 10 December 2018.
Below, please find the full text of the response of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, with the attendant explanations:
CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH
Response to a question
on the liceity of a hysterectomy in certain cases
on the liceity of a hysterectomy in certain cases
On July 31, 1993, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
faith published Responses to Questions Proposed Concerning
“Uterine Isolation” and Related Matters. These responses, which
retain all of their validity, consider the removal of the uterus to be
morally licit when there is a grave and present danger to the life or health of
the mother, and hold as illicit, insofar as they are methods of direct
sterilization, the removal of the uterus and tubal ligation (uterine
isolation) with the intention of making impossible an eventual pregnancy
which can pose some risk for the mother.
In recent years some very specific cases have been submitted
to the Holy See also concerning the hysterectomy, which, however, present a
different issue from that which was examined in 1993, because they regard
situations in which procreation is no longer possible. The question and the
response, accompanied by an Illustrative Note, that are now being published
refer to this new particular case and complete the responses given in 1993.
Question: When the uterus is found to be
irreversibly in such a state that it is no longer suitable for procreation and
medical experts have reached the certainty that an eventual pregnancy will
bring about a spontaneous abortion before the fetus is able to arrive at a
viable state, is it licit to remove it (hysterectomy)?
Response: Yes, because it does not regard
sterilization.
Illustrative Note
The question regards some extreme cases, recently submitted
to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, that constitute a different
issue from that which was given a negative response on July 31, 1993. The
element that renders the present question essentially different is the
certainty reached by medical experts that in the case of a pregnancy, it would
be spontaneously interrupted before the fetus arrives at a state of viability.
Here it is not a question of difficulty, or of risks of greater or lesser
importance, but of a couple for which it is not possible to procreate.
The precise object of sterilization is to impede the
functioning of the reproductive organs, and the malice of sterilization
consists in the refusal of children: it is an act against the bonum
prolis. On the contrary, in the case considered in the question, it is
known that the reproductive organs are not capable of protecting a conceived
child up to viability, namely, they are not capable of fulfilling their natural
procreative function. The objective of the procreative process is to
bring a baby into the world, but here the birth of a living fetus is not
biologically possible. Therefore, we are not dealing with a defective, or
risky, functioning of the reproductive organs, but we are faced here with a
situation in which the natural end of bringing a living child into the world is
not attainable.
The medical procedure should not be judged as being against
procreation, because we find ourselves within an objective context in which
neither procreation, nor as a consequence, an anti-procreative action, are
possible. Removing a reproductive organ incapable of bringing a pregnancy
to term should not therefore be qualified as direct sterilization, which is and
remains intrinsically illicit as an end and as a means.
The problem of the criteria to evaluate if the pregnancy
could, or could not, continue on to the state of viability is a medical
question. From the moral point of view, one must ask if the highest
degree of certainty that medicine can reach has been reached, and in this sense
the response given is valid for the question, as it has been proposed in good
faith.
Furthermore, the response to the question does
not state that the decision to undergo a hysterectomy is always the best one,
but that only in the above-mentioned conditions is such a decision morally
licit, without, therefore, excluding other options (for example, recourse to
infertile periods or total abstinence). It is the decision of the
spouses, in dialogue with doctors and their spiritual guide, to choose the path
to follow, applying the general criteria of the gradualness of medical
intervention to their case and to their circumstances.
The Sovereign Pontiff Francis, in the Audience granted to
the undersigned Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, has
approved the above response and ordered its publication.
Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,
December 10, 2018.
Luis F. Card. LADARIA, S.I.
Prefect
Prefect
+ Giacomo MORANDI
Titular Archbishop of Cerveteri
Secretary
Titular Archbishop of Cerveteri
Secretary
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