Pharmacy Refuses To Fill Birth Contol Pills-Do They Have That Right?

by wednesday 53 Replies latest watchtower medical

  • wednesday
    wednesday

    Yesterday, a pharmacy CVC, refused to fill a script for birth control pills. The customer was btw, a married woman with 2 kids. The pharmicist aparently did not believe in birth control, so refused to fill the script. It was discussed at length on the Mark Davis show in Dallas this am. A pharmicist called in to support the other pharmacist. He said that a pharmiacist can refuse to fill any script they choose, b/c they are professionals themselves. Mark Daivs was livid and said if he owned a pharmacy , he would not hire someone who did that. I was in the car, and did not have a phone, so i could not tell him that if he refused to hire someone based soley on that, he would probably be hit with a law suit. Seems it violates your religious rights. Having worked as a nurse for a long time, i had my share of problems with the blood issue. I felt i could not administer blood and even though it was a part of my job, i cited religious reasons. Ideally, what is supposed to happen here is i would assume the responsibility of making sure someone else took care of my patient, so they receive the blood transfusion. Under no circumstances could i just refuse and not provide for my patient. That is a great theory, but in practice, it was hard. No other nurse really wants to take your patient, esp one receiving a blood transfusin, b/c it is a lot of work. And if u are the one nurse who never gets the patients who receive blood, the other nurses will not like it and complain. (unless u are working with a group of your best friends) it is also not fair, b/c as i said, blood is a lot of work. So for me to always not get those patients, is not fair.Eventually, i worked i other areas so as to avoid this issue. Now it would not be an isue.

    So back to the pharmacy. What should have happened is if the pharmacist felt it violated their conscience to dispense the pills, then another pharmacist should have done it. Most likely they were the only pharmacist there, so in that case, they shoud have filled the script. Telling the client to go elsewhere, might work, but not in all cases.(insurance problems etc).Also, u can lose a lot of business that way.. It has now been on the news, and i won't shop at CVC, that is for sure.

    Personally, i feel the pharmacist stepped way over the line and should mind their own business. Actually the pharmacist can refuse to fill anything, for any reason, so said the pharmacist that called in to the mark davis show. I think that is crazy. If the doc prescribes it, he should fill it. I know as a nurse i have some ability to not administer a drug, ie, if i felt it woud not be ok for the patient at that time.. example, patient wants pain meds. They had pain meds 4 hours previously. I judge them to still be groggy and their blood pressure is low. I would hold off administering anything until the blood pressure came up. (but probably let the doc know) This is different than me dieciding they were not really in pain, or just deciding i don't agree with narcotics and just refusing to administer the drug.

    So how would u feel if your pharmacist refused to fill your birth control pills? What if your pharmacist does not agree with anxiety meds, or pain meds? Do u feel he/she had that right? Of course even jack in the box can refuse to serve u, but not b/c of your race, religion or whatever. People only generally do things like that if u are causing a disturbance.

    any thoughts?

  • wednesday
  • Soledad
    Soledad

    I think that pharmacist was way out of line. It's ok to have your beliefs and values, but please dont shove them down my throat!

  • Scully
    Scully

    There was a post similar to this not too long ago.

    There is absolutely NO place for a medical professional to impose their personal beliefs on their clientele. I would suggest that the person contact the Head Office of the Pharmacy chain and the state's licensure board for pharmacists and lodge a complaint against the pharmacist for unprofessional behaviour and for discrimination against her own rights and belief systems.

    If he refuses to sell birth control pills to female clients, the customer needs check whether the pharmacist also refuses to sell condoms, diaphragms, contraceptive foams and jellies. If those things are available, the pharmacist is being inconsistent in allowing certain kinds of birth control to be sold, but not others. If he sells condoms, but not "female" birth control items, then he is discriminating against the female gender.

    That attitude is archaic and is tantamount to refusing to sell anticonvulsants to epileptics because the Bible attributes epilepsy to demon possession.

    In my professional opinion, he's up $h!t's Creek without a paddle.

    Love, Scully

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    It is legal for a Pharmacist to refuse to fill a prescription if they feel it will be harmful to the patient... they CANNOT refuse for religious, conscience, or any other reason.

    I see a Pharmacist who is about to loose his/her job!

    It is total BS when someone tries to impose his or her own beliefs onto someone else. Ironically this is the same kind of person who will scream bloody murder if anyone tried to discriminate against them for religious reasons.

    Hypocrites!

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    That is ridiculous. I need yo pick some up myself on Friday and I do intend to be able to get them. I don't even know what my reaction would be if they were refused..

  • Yerusalyim
    Yerusalyim

    Since BirthControl pills are used for things OTHER THAN Birth Control...it's not the right position. Now, if it was an abortificant...I'd side with the pharmicist.

  • bebu
    bebu
    There is absolutely NO place for a medical professional to impose their personal beliefs on their clientele.

    Yet, it is also difficult if the clientele imposes his medical belief on the medical personnel. Some individuals feel that certain things are not just private decisions but important moral stances. This pharmacist may not have the groundswell of public opinion on his side, but I actually respect that he would not compromise his beliefs (even though I disagree with him). (As long as he didn't start a diatribe about how evil the client was for getting birth control, that is!)

    The kindest thing to do would, imo, would be to find another pharmacist. I don't think it is right to revile him, or force him to compromise his morals--that is not really a victory to be proud of.

    Yes, it means being inconvenienced. But punishing someone for not thinking exactly as we do isn't the best answer. Understanding and kindness work better...

    bebu

  • wednesday
    wednesday

    Yes, i know, a Pharmacist can refuse to fill a script b/c he is considered a professional and can make that judgement. Just as a nurse has to make professional judgments. I tell u though, he'd better have a pretty good reason, casue i'm going to report him to his board, and call my doc (who prescribed the drug) and maybe call the news. (which this lady did with the BC pills).

    I'm sorry Yeru, i dsagree, If the pharmacy stocks the abortion pill, then u should be able to get it. If he has a problem, he should call your doc. If the pharmacy itself decides not to sell the drug itself, then fine, u have to go to another drug store.

  • Scully
    Scully

    bebu

    Nobody in the USA or Canada has the right to infringe on the religious freedoms of another person. Now, since it is the pharmacist who has a problem with selling birth control pills due to his religious position, perhaps he needs to find another job instead of one where he has the power and ability to impose his beliefs on people who do not share his beliefs.

    What he is doing is discriminatory, and I'm absolutely confident that it also goes against the policy and procedure of the pharmacy chain that employs him. In addition to that, his professional position requires that he treat his clientele with the same level of confidentiality as any other medical professional is expected to do. Can you imagine how horrified you'd be in a crowded pharmacy to be told "I am not going to sell birth control pills to you because it is against MY religion"?? That customer is entitled to the same privacy that a man buying Viagra or Minoxidil would receive. How dare he breach that woman's medical confidentiality!!

    This is just wrong on SOOOO many levels.

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