Saturday, April 16, 2005

Separation Of Church And Pharmacy



Courtesy of The Illustrated daily Scribble



Angry yet?

Fasten your Margo Channing seatbelts...

Bad Medicine: Prescription For Theocracy?

Who should decide what religious doctrines you obey? You or your pharmacist? In a move that troubles many civil liberties advocates, some pharmacists across the nation are refusing to fill certain prescriptions, claiming a First Amendment right to the free exercise of religion. --snip--

The Religious Right's First Amendment claims have produced a raft of state bills, some of which have been enacted. Illinois, for example, has a law that allows health care professionals to refuse any medical procedure they find morally repugnant. Some observers say the statute would allow a fundamentalist nurse who believes AIDS is God's punishment for gays to refuse treatment for AIDS patients. At least nine other states are contemplating laws similar to the one in Illinois.

According to a study by the American Bar Association, exemption laws for pharmacists and other medical professionals have resulted in several troubling incidents. Cancer patients, pregnant patients, patients near death and rape victims have all been harmed by such practices.

Religious Right lobbyists have been overreaching for many years now. And they are emboldened by the 2004 elections and the media-hyped conventional wisdom that evangelicals played a major role in the election of social conservatives. But like the whole of the Bill of Rights, the free exercise clause of the First Amendment is not absolute. The First Amendment strongly protects religious beliefs. But federal courts have ruled on a number of occasions that religious expression that can cause physical harm to others must be restricted. LINK

Frankly, I don't give a Rhett Butler sized damn what my local pharmacist believes or doesn't believe. However...

If s/he wants my greenbacks, s/he'd better by damn treat all customers with the respect and dignity they deserve.

Your homework, dear readers, is to ask your local pharmacist to hang a sign on the door, informing customers of his/her willingness to (or Bible-based decision not to) uphold the law of the land and sell birth control pills along with the Viagra, the Ephedra, and the lottery tickets.

Now pop some corn and enjoy what's left of your Saturday night.


0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home