Re: Contraceptive access

From: Charlie Chambers (cchamber@gorge.net)
Thu Apr 21 10:47:56 2005


I find the whole situation ridiculous. Do you think that any of those pharmacies sell cigarettes or alcohol? We know that both agents increase miscarriage rates and adversely affect pregnancies.

I'm a catholic and think the church has much bigger problems and moral issues than contraceptive use.

************************************************************************ * Charlie Chambers

--
Hood River, OR
cchamber@alumni.rice.edu

"No matter where you go... there you are." Dr. Buckaroo Banzai ************************************************************************ On Apr 21, 2005, at 5:43 AM, Anna Meenan, MD wrote:

> Even in a one-pharmacy community (which is currently where I practice), > there is always http://www.drugstore.com, and pretty much everyone has > internet > access now, either at home or through their local library. So, if the > single pharmacy in town is owned by one Catholic pharmacist, who > because > of the shortage of pharmacists, can only find a Catholic pharmacist to > assist him/her, is there a restriction on how far away the pharmacist > can send the patient to another pharmacy, or can s/he refer them to the > internet? > > Anna Meenan, MD > > At Wed, 20 Apr 2005, Joanne Bulley, MD wrote: >> >> Like you I have no problem with a pharmacist not dispensing or >> stocking >> whatever med in such situations -- unless -- that is THE ONLY place in >> town -- then there is some sort of obligation to the community to >> dispense what the doc and patient have decided upon (well yes I can >> think of exceptions to even that) ... >> >> The bill includes just that -- if you don't / won't stock or do it -- >> send someone elswhere. The probelm being that there have been >> pharmacists who have KEPT the prescription and harrassed the woman >> with >> the prescription about having the script in the first place. >> >>> The rule also forces pharmacies that do not stock the requested >>> pills, >>> including emergency contraception, to order them or refer the >>> patient to >>> a nearby pharmacy. Gov. Blagojevich enacted the rule April 1 after >>> two >>> Chicago pharmacists refused to fill prescriptions for emergency >>> contraceptives. >> >> Joanne >> >> At Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Anna Meenan, MD wrote: >>> >>> I have no problem with a pharmacist who is not comfortable dispensing >>> OCP's, as long as s/he gives the prescription back to the patient and >>> refers her to another pharmacy if s/he is not comfortable filling it. >>> Our nearest pharmacy stopped stocking Accutane, probably because of >>> paperwork and liability concerns, and I had to drive across town to >>> get >>> it for my son. I wouldn't dream of trying to force a store to stock >>> a >>> specific product. We live in a free enterprise society. Can the >>> Federal government compel a pharmacist to commit what his religion >>> classifies as a sin? I would hope not. The State of Illinois (in the >>> guise of the U of I) sends me a list every year of every religious >>> holiday celebrated by every religion on the planet, and directs me >>> not >>> to schedule any major exams on those days, or to compel students to >>> come >>> to class on those days (I think the list leaves me 2 or 3 days to >>> schedule that stuff). So the State of Illinois cannot compel a >>> Catholic >>> student to show up in class on, oh let's say the Feast of the >>> Assumption, but can compel a Catholic pharmacist to dispense OCP's. >>> Where exactly are we separating Church and State? >>> >>> -- >>> Anna Meenan, MD >>> >> -- >> Joanne Bulley, MD >> Keene, NH, USA >> >





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