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UK hospital to ask all male cancer patients if they are pregnant

Updated: April 1, 2022 at 12:57 pm EST  See Comments

Fri Apr 1, 2022 – 12:12 pm EDT

LIVERPOOL, England (LifeSiteNews) — Staff at a British National Health Service (NHS) hospital have begun asking male cancer patients whether they might be pregnant before scheduling certain scans.

A report in the Telegraph Monday unveiled that the Walton Care NHS Foundation Trust in Liverpool asks “all patients under the age of 60, regardless of how you may identify your gender” if they are pregnant before performing radiotherapy, x-rays, and MRI scans, all of which can be harmful to a developing baby in the womb.

The new measure has apparently been adopted in response to a 2017 change in the law governing the medical procedures during a pregnancy, switching from identifying “females of childbearing age” specifically to cautioning “individuals of childbearing potential.”

The Telegraph said it understands that there are other NHS trusts implementing similar policies in England.

A spokesperson for the hospital said that asking men if they are expecting is “the least intrusive way of ensuring it is safe to proceed,” but at least one woman whose husband was quizzed about being pregnant before receiving a scan for his cancer said it was a cause of “unnecessary

The remainder of this article is available in its entirety at LifeSite News

The views expressed in this news alert by the author do not directly represent that of The Official Street Preachers or its editors

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