Pubdate: Mon, 02 Apr 2001 Source: Grand Island Independent (NE) Copyright: 2001 Grand Island Independent Contact: http://www.theindependent.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1023 DRUG TESTING KEEPS WOMEN FROM CARE Sometimes the most well-meaning ideas have far worse ramifications. Take the Supreme Court's decision last week that testing post-partum women for drugs without their consent violates their constitution rights. The case involved a mother's constitutional right to privacy versus the right of her unborn child to health and safety, which was jeopardized through the mother's drug abuse. The ultimate goal of arresting women who tested positive for drugs shortly after giving birth was to get them into drug treatment. The unintended results allegedly were that crack users were choosing not to get prenatal care or deciding to have their babies outside of hospitals, thus depriving their newborns of vital medical services. This was a very important decision in protecting the right of all Americans to privacy -- and to a confidential relationship with their doctors. The South Carolina drug-testing program that was involved in this court case plans to continue, but only after police obtain a search warrant or the patient's consent. Whether or not the doctors who participated in this program really had their patients' welfare in mind or not, the high court ruled that they shouldn't have turned the test results over to police without their patients' permission. Patients normally expect medical test results to be kept private and the confidential relationship between a patient and physician shouldn't be broken. The physician could've encouraged the mother to enter a drug treatment program without involving law enforcement officials. We can understand the argument that this program was an effort to reduce crack cocaine use by pregnant women. Once a woman tested positive, she was arrested for distributing the drug to a minor. But no law enforcement effort, no matter how awesome the goals, is worth violating our constitutional freedoms. Like it or not, every American receives the same protections from these rights -- even pregnant drug abusers. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth