Krista and Jami Contreras said Dr. Vesna Roi of Eastlake Pediatrics in Roseville, Michigan, had initially agreed to be the pediatrician to their daughter, Bay. But after "much prayer," Roi had a change of heart, although his decision seems to indicate that she doesn't have one.
When the couple brought their 6-day-old baby into the office for a wellness check-up, another doctor told them that Roi would not be seeing them after all.
"I was completely dumbfounded," Krista, who is the baby's biological mother, told the newspaper. "We just looked at each other and said, 'Did we hear that correctly?'"
The other doctor at the practice offered to care for the baby. The couple told a local news station that the second doctor also told them Roi didn't even come into the clinic that day because she didn't want to see them.
"As far as we know Bay doesn't have a sexual orientation yet so I'm not really sure what that matters," Jami said. "We're not your patient she's your patient. And the fact is that your job is to keep babies healthy and you can't keep a baby healthy that has gay parents?"
Roi later sent the couple a handwritten letter.
"After much prayer following your prenatal, I felt that I would not be able to develop the personal patient doctor relationship that I normally do with my patients," wrote Roi, who has an average of three out of five stars at Health grades and four out of five on Vitals based on limited reviews.
Roi apologized for not telling them in person, and said they were welcome in the clinic, but that Bay would have to be seen by the other doctor at the practice.
"Please know that I believe that God gives us free choice and I would never judge anyone based on what they do with that free choice," Roi wrote. "Again, I am sorry for the hurt and angry feelings that were created by this. I hope you can accept my apology."
Roi's decision may seem outrageous, but it's not illegal. The Free Press reports that while 22 states have laws prohibiting doctors from discriminating based on sexual orientation, Michigan is not one of them.
However, the American Medical Association's code of ethics says doctors should not refuse care based on race gender or sexual orientation. Doctors can refuse specific treatments if they are incompatible with personal, religious or moral beliefs.
Roi has not been a member of the AMA since 2001, according to her website. She does belong to the American Academy of Pediatrics which similarly urges members to practice non discrimination .
Krista and Jami Contreras, who were "married" in Vermont in 2012, said that they were going public to raise awareness and change the laws to protect families with same-sex parents.
"It was embarrassing, it was humiliating and here we are, new parents trying to protect her, and we know this happens in the world and we're completely prepared for this to happen other places. But not at our 6-day-old's wellness appointment."
This story requires no in depth analysis, and no critical thought process. It is simple. The baby has nothing to do with their parents choices. They either benefit or they suffer. But they should not be punished simply because someone disagrees with their parents choices.
PR
The child should come first in any situation. While I may not agree with the lifestyle of the people who are caring for the child, the baby comes first. When you deal with a baby or a minor child--you have to also deal with the people caring for the child--perhaps Vesna Roi didn't want to do that.
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