A measure requiring physicians to spell out a patient’s options even if they’re objectionable to the doctor has received Senate approval.  The 34 to 19 vote sends to the House the plan by Evanston Democratic Senator Daniel Biss.  It would change a 1977 law that allows health care providers to refuse to perform medical procedures they find morally objectionable.  The Biss plan would require that even if a health care provider refuses to treat a patient, it must tell the patient what’s wrong, what options exist, and where treatment is available.  Biss says the proposal arose from the case of a woman who was undergoing a miscarriage over the course of several weeks but the hospital she went to refused to provide a diagnosis or options.