An organization of Christian healthcare professionals and one of its members filed suit yesterday in a California federal district court challenging the current version of California's End of Life Options Act (EOLA) on free exercise, free speech, due process and equal protection grounds. The complaint (full text) in Christian Medical & Dental Associations v. Bonta, (CDCA, filed 2/22/2022), alleges that changes made to EOLA last year by SB 380 remove previous protections and now require doctors to participate in assisted suicide in violation of their religious beliefs. It contends that SB 380 requires objecting physicians to:
a. Document the date of a patient’s initial assisted-suicide request, which counts as the first of two required oral requests;
b. Transfer the records ... to a subsequent physician who may complete the assisted suicide;
c. Diagnose whether a patient has a terminal disease, inform the patient of the medical prognosis, and determine whether a patient has the capacity to make decisions, all of which are statutorily required steps toward assisted suicide;
d. Provide information to a patient about the End of Life Options Act;
e. Provide a requesting patient with a referral to another provider who may complete the assisted suicide.
ADF issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.