



But what about women who don't report rapes 'cos they're too scared? Should they be denied the pill? Should they be forced to go through another trauma, to have an abortion which is far more distressing to experience when a 10 week old foetus is sucked out of you than a 72hr clump of cells? Should they be forced to give birth to an unwanted child? What do you tell the when it child grows up?
by Cat
This lady needed a prescription filled. IE a doctor said it was necessary. And i agree the pharmacist should have filled it/ he doesnt know better than a doctor.
Thats the point of this case, the lady was raped, the doctor signed a prescriptipon, it needed to be filled!
by Teresa
(quotes)
But what about women who don't report rapes 'cos they're too scared? Should they be denied the pill? Should they be forced to go through another trauma, to have an abortion which is far more distressing to experience when a 10 week old foetus is sucked out of you than a 72hr clump of cells? Should they be forced to give birth to an unwanted child? What do you tell the when it child grows up?
But the UK lay also protects the religious. IE, you dont have to sell it as long as you provide alternative information.
by Samphirette
I don't believe that any public pharmacy supplying the morning after pill should turn away anyone on a personal belief. Afterall events like this go to show that the woman could be asking for the pill for any number of reasons and not on any immoral grounds.
what I'm saying is it was a public pharmacy and ASDA for example should have had a pharmacist who was able to sell EVERY single one of their products available on every shift.
Gallagher said Eckerd's employment manual says pharmacists are not allowed to opt out of filling a prescription for religious, moral or ethical reasons.
So if the Doctor perscribes it you say the he should fill the perscription even if it's against his religious believes. But if something is there which you can get without a perscription (and normally there is a pretty good reason why you can get it without a perscription) he should just follow his religious believes and not serve you?
by Cat
And i agree the pharmacist should have filled it/ he doesnt know better than a doctor.
Uhmm well if I truely believed I would rott in hell for doing something I would choose a profession where I would never (or atleast mostly avoid) situation where I might be brought into such a situation.
by Cat
(quotes)
Where's the harm in traveling another (say) 30 mins for the MA pill to save the soul (or his belief in his soul) of someone who truely believes he/she would rott in hell for selling it?
But the UK law is that a pharmacist doesnt have to dispence anything against his religion unless it's by precpriprion. his refusal only applies to over the counter drugs.
by Samph
what I'm saying is it was a public pharmacy and ASDA for example should have had a pharmacist who was able to sell EVERY single one of their products available on every shift.
NO, same law. over counter, own choice, firing someone for not dispencing is illegal. not dispencing a prescription, illegal.
by Sampf
If it was a privately owned pharmacy then the rules would be different
Basically yes. Doctors can precscribe for many conditions that pharmacists dont know of. For example, a person whth a history of ectopic pregnancies that would kill her. no religion (well, westernised religion) would deny her ther MA pill or abortion if not caught early enough. same with rape.
by Chambler
So if the Doctor perscribes it you say the he should fill the perscription even if it's against his religious believes. But if something is there which you can get without a perscription (and normally there is a pretty good reason why you can get it without a perscription) he should just follow his religious believes and not serve you?
Anyone who is his own doctor is a fool, anyone who is his own lawyer is an idiot (or something similar).
by Chambler
If this woman walked into the store and asked for the morning after pill and had a doctors degree? She is a doctor so she knows better than the pharmacist....
In religious theological terms this takes the decision out of the pharmacists hands. It's the best course of action for the woman, the reasons of which the pharmacist doesnt know.
by Chambler
If you make a choice you have to make a consitant one. So that means that you also shouldn't fill perscriptions of Doctors. Which you just said they should because the doctor knows best. See the dilemma here?
Sorry I think you got it wrong there. The choice is very simple and the pharmesict if free to make it. Consequences are however aren't nice:
by Cat
(quotes)
In religious theological terms this takes the decision out of the pharmacists hands. It's the best course of action for the woman, the reasons of which the pharmacist doesnt know.
Despite medications broadly being labled over the counter, or prescription, there is actually a 3 tier system as I discovered.
by Eve
I'm not going to go on one, did that last time, I just think that if they are aware that this guy will not supply anyone with the morning after pill then surely there must be SOMEONE else in asda able to serve the woman.