I find this article utterly appalling. How dare these pharmacists impose their morals on their customers... especially when those customers have a prescription from their doctors
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The need for a blood transfusion is typically life threatening. The need for a chemical abortion isn't. A better comparison is a Catholic storekeeper refusing to sell condoms or a Mormon storekeeper refusing to sell alcohol or tobacco products.
Not all doctors have to perform abortions nor are they required to give prescriptions of the drug to their patients. There are some that hold the Hippocratic Oath (which was later changed) quite dear to them and their profession. Some old guy pharmacist living in a country town in the Bible Belt that's been doing this as his livelihood for the last 30 years shouldn't have to resign because the FDA approved an abortion pill, and I'm willing to bet those are the types of people that are refusing to dispense the drug, not fresh-out-of-pharmschool young adults. It's not his fault the woman got knocked up in the first place, not his fault that she was too "traumatized" to go anywhere else (That's the phrase Americans typically use to set up an upcoming
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Morning after pill = Blood transfusion in so far as both are 'dispensed' by someone, both have been prescribed to individual patients by their doctors, and a third party should have no right to interfere with that because of their own private moral code
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I don't know about England, but in America, you can't get a blood transfusion at the local pharmacy. And if the guy doesn't stock morning-after pills, he doesn't have them! Do you think he has a display of the pills behind his counter to taunt women and tell them "Sorry, you can't have them! Nyah nyah!" And let's say he did sell them, but was sold out at the moment. Then what? Oh, she's screwed! Sue the pharmacy! They didn't have the pills she needed and she didn't want to drive to another store!
Chemical abortion is not a life-threatening necessity and GUESS WHAT? YOU DON'T NEED TO BE PREGNANT TO GET THEM PRESCRIBED TO YOU! If you have a doctor's prescription, Planned Parenthood and many other pharmacies can MAIL it to you! She's the fucktard that wasn't prepared, not the pharmacist with his morals, regardless of how "outdated" they may be. If she was a rape victim, the hospital has these pills available.
You can't get a blood transfusion at the local pharmacy in UK either. But I think you kinda missed the point of the analogy...
UK pharmacists do stock Levonelle. I'm surprised US pharmacists don't.
Chemical abortion can be a medical necessity. As for 'you don't need to be pregnant to get them prescribed'... well, the point is rather that you don't know whether you're pregnant and you'd rather not wait to find out. In the UK, our postal service certainly isn't up to mailling pills within 72 hours!
As for the last part of your post, I just really don't understand where you're coming from. (Btw - please keep your language under control on my LJ).
The point is that if you're going to have sex, prepare with your birth control options FIRST before you do it. Don't wait until AFTER you get pregnant.
Levonelle is quite closely controlled in the UK. I don't think you'd be able to get a dose in advance 'just in case you need it'. Maybe it's different in the US.
And what if you're using birth control but the condom splits? Well... then you need the morning after pill after the event... which makes your point rather pointless.
It doesn't get much more simpler than that.
No, actually. It's far more complicated than that.
The story is about pharmacists in the US, not the UK. In the UK, you can buy Levonelle over the counter. I guess that makes YOUR point rather pointless.
Everyone knows condoms aren't 100% effective. "What if the condom breaks?" should be a question a woman asks herself BEFORE she has sex, not after it happens.
Err.... this whole things started because I said that the woman was completely within her rights to get Levonelle from the pharmacist the morning after. In your first paragraph there, you seem to be agreeing.
And "What if the condom breaks" should be a question that both parties ask before they have sex. A resulting pregnancy is not solely the woman's responsibility. If you believe it is, you're gonna get a shock when you get billed for child maintenance.
I also say it's within the rights of the pharmacist not to stock and sell Levonelle in his store. If you read the link I posted, it says that it's not available in all stores because some UK pharmacists have moral objections to the drug as well. It's not just a US thing.
And we're back to my original argument. I wouldn't dream of telling the pharmacist that she must or must not take the drug herself - that's her own personal choice to make (possibly in consultation with the doctor). Likewise, she has no right to comment on or impact on my own moral decisions.
Btw - this topic is about to fall off the end of my friend's page, so I may not notice if you add more comments...
The need for a blood transfusion is typically life threatening. The need for a chemical abortion isn't. A better comparison is a Catholic storekeeper refusing to sell condoms or a Mormon storekeeper refusing to sell alcohol or tobacco products.
Not all doctors have to perform abortions nor are they required to give prescriptions of the drug to their patients. There are some that hold the Hippocratic Oath (which was later changed) quite dear to them and their profession. Some old guy pharmacist living in a country town in the Bible Belt that's been doing this as his livelihood for the last 30 years shouldn't have to resign because the FDA approved an abortion pill, and I'm willing to bet those are the types of people that are refusing to dispense the drug, not fresh-out-of-pharmschool young adults. It's not his fault the woman got knocked up in the first place, not his fault that she was too "traumatized" to go anywhere else (That's the phrase Americans typically use to set up an upcoming ( ... )
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Chemical abortion is not a life-threatening necessity and GUESS WHAT? YOU DON'T NEED TO BE PREGNANT TO GET THEM PRESCRIBED TO YOU! If you have a doctor's prescription, Planned Parenthood and many other pharmacies can MAIL it to you! She's the fucktard that wasn't prepared, not the pharmacist with his morals, regardless of how "outdated" they may be. If she was a rape victim, the hospital has these pills available.
But...I guess it's easy to blame the pharmacist.
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UK pharmacists do stock Levonelle. I'm surprised US pharmacists don't.
Chemical abortion can be a medical necessity. As for 'you don't need to be pregnant to get them prescribed'... well, the point is rather that you don't know whether you're pregnant and you'd rather not wait to find out. In the UK, our postal service certainly isn't up to mailling pills within 72 hours!
As for the last part of your post, I just really don't understand where you're coming from. (Btw - please keep your language under control on my LJ).
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It doesn't get much more simpler than that.
Reply
And what if you're using birth control but the condom splits? Well... then you need the morning after pill after the event... which makes your point rather pointless.
It doesn't get much more simpler than that.
No, actually. It's far more complicated than that.
Reply
Reply
Everyone knows condoms aren't 100% effective. "What if the condom breaks?" should be a question a woman asks herself BEFORE she has sex, not after it happens.
Reply
And "What if the condom breaks" should be a question that both parties ask before they have sex. A resulting pregnancy is not solely the woman's responsibility. If you believe it is, you're gonna get a shock when you get billed for child maintenance.
Reply
Reply
And we're back to my original argument. I wouldn't dream of telling the pharmacist that she must or must not take the drug herself - that's her own personal choice to make (possibly in consultation with the doctor). Likewise, she has no right to comment on or impact on my own moral decisions.
Btw - this topic is about to fall off the end of my friend's page, so I may not notice if you add more comments...
Reply
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