by Sue Ella Deadwyler
More than 50 years ago, the Georgia General Assembly gave
the Department of Public Health authority to provide confidential "family
planning services" to anyone upon request, regardless of age or marital
status.
With the law on their side, public health clinics readily
provided confidential "family planning" services (contraceptives,
etc.) to minors, and, by doing so, tacitly endorsed fornication for all ages,
including children. Those services to minors became more convenient when
school-based clinics decided to do the same, and added off-campus referrals.
Result: Some pregnant students were taken on "field trips" to get
abortions … all without parental knowledge or consent.
So, for over half-a-century, in matters of sexual activity,
the State of Georgia has progressively taken more and more control over
children by interfering with parental authority. That’s happening again, right
now.
On February 22nd, Representative Betty Price introduced H.B.
1058. She was sworn in July 20, 2015 to fill the vacancy left when
Representative Harry Geisinger passed away last year. She is an
anesthesiologist and, no doubt, her medical perspective prompted her to
introduce this bill to drastically change the AIDS law as it affects children
and families.
Currently in Georgia, a child of any age may request and
personally consent to receive medical care and surgery for any venereal
disease. However, that consent does not apply to AIDS, since current law in
Georgia does NOT define HIV/AIDS as a venereal disease. Under-age consent for
treatment and surgery for venereal disease is as legally binding as though the
child had reached the age of majority, and current law does not allow anyone to
supersede that consent.
H.B. 1058 would add HIV to the list of diseases for which
children can personally consent for confidential medical care and surgery. Then
the bill repeals Georgia law mandating that confidential AIDS information shall
be disclosed to the infected minor’s parent and replaces it with "AIDS
confidential information may be disclosed to such person’s parent."
H.B. 1058 passed the House 169-0, and at seven o’clock
Wednesday night the Senate passed it 46-7. Unless the governor vetoes it, H.B.
1058 becomes law July 1st and, once again, parental authority over their minor
offspring will be transferred to government employees. That just happened,
despite the fact that neither government nor the medical profession is ordained
by God to nullify parental authority over their children. If anybody in the
world needs to know that a minor child is infected with AIDS, it’s the parent.
Ask the governor to uphold parental authority and veto H.B.
1058. His number is 404 656-1776.
For Georgia Insight I’m Sue Ella Deadwyler, your Capitol correspondent.
No comments:
Post a Comment