uterine isolation and related matters
Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
"UTERINE ISOLATION" AND RELATED MATTERS
RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS PROPOSED CONCERNING "UNTERINE ISOLATION" AND RELATED MATTERS
The Cardinal Members of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith in answer to the questions examined in ordinary session decreed
the following replies:
Q. 1.When the uterus becomes so seriously injured (e.g., during a
delivery or a Caesarian section) so as to render medically indicated
even its total removal (hysterectomy) in order to counter an immediate
serious threat to the life or health of the mother, is it licit to
perform such a procedure notwithstanding the permanent sterility which
will result for the woman?
R. Affirmative.
Q. 2.When the uterus (e.g., as a result of previous Caesarian sections)
is in a state such that while not constituting in itself a present risk
to the life or health of the woman, nevertheless is foreseeably
incapable of carrying a future pregnancy to term without danger to the
mother, danger which in some cases could be serious, is it licit to
remove the uterus (hysterectomy) in order to prevent a possible future
danger deriving from conception?
R. Negative.
Q. 3.In the same situation as in no. 2, is it licit to substitute tubal
ligation, also called "uterine isolation," for the hysterectomy, since
the same end would be attained of averting the risks of a possible
pregnancy by means of a procedure which is much simpler for the doctor
and less serious for the woman, and since in addition, in some cases,
the ensuing sterility might be reversible?
R. Negative.
Explanation
In the first case, the hysterectomy is licit because it has a directly
therapeutic character, even though it may be foreseen that permanent
sterility will result. In fact, it is the pathological condition of the
uterus (e.g., a hemorrhage which cannot be stopped by other means),
which makes its removal medically indicated. The removal of the organ
has as its aim, therefore, the curtailing of a serious present danger
to the woman independent of a possible future pregnancy.
From the moral point of view, the cases of hysterectomy and "uterine
isolation" in the circumstances described in nos. 2 and 3 are
different. These fall into the moral category of direct sterilization
which in the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith's document
Quaecumque Sterilizatio (AAS LXVIII 1976, 738-740, no. 1) is defined as
an action « whose sole, immediate effect is to render the
generative faculty incapable of procreation ». And the same
document continues: « It (direct sterilization) is absolutely
forbidden ... according to the teaching of the Church, even when it is
motivated by a subjectively right intention of curing or preventing a
physical or psychological ill-effect which is foreseen or feared as a
result of pregnancy ".
In point of fact, the uterus as described in no. 2 does not constitute
in and of itself any present danger to the woman. Indeed the proposal
to substitute "uterine isolation" for hysterectomy under the same
conditions shows precisely that the uterus in and of itself does not
pose a pathological problem for the woman. Therefore, the described
procedures do not have a properly therapeutic character but are aimed
in themselves at rendering sterile future sexual acts freely chosen.
The end of avoiding risks to the mother, deriving from a possible
pregnancy, is thus pursued by means of a direct sterilization, in
itself always morally illicit, while other ways, which are morally
licit, remain open to free choice.
The contrary opinion which considers the interventions described in
nos. 2 and 3 as indirect sterilizations, licit under certain
conditions, cannot be regarded as valid and may not be followed in
Catholic hospitals.
+ Joseph Card. Ratzinger
Prefect
+ Alberto Bovone
Titular Archbishop of Caesarea in Numidia
Secretary
During an audience granted to the undersigned Prefect, the
Sovereign Pontiff John Paul II approved these responses adopted in an
ordinary session of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and
ordered them to be published.
Rome, at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the 31st of July 1993.
|