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Womens eNews , May 2, 2005
Pharmacists Dispense
Anti-Choice Activism
Author : Molly M. Ginty
(WOMENSENEWS)--In Laconia, N.H., a pharmacist
denied a patient emergency contraception, forcing
her to drive in vain around her rural area
looking for another druggist to help.
In Menomonie, Wisc., a pharmacist refused to
transfer a college student's birth control
prescription elsewhere.
In Denton, Texas, a druggist refused to fill
an emergency contraception prescription even
though it was for a rape survivor.
These stories are among the 180 recently reported
incidents of pharmacists denying women birth
control pills or emergency contraception (a
high-dose birth control pill that prevents
the establishment of a pregnancy and is also
called the morning-after pill) because pharmacists
have moral or religious objections to these
medications.
Within the past year, pharmacists have refused
to dispense reproductive medications in 11
states.
Pro-choice advocates say these incidents--if
left unchecked--could undermine reproductive
rights as the shift to managed health care
makes patient interactions with pharmacists
more common and complex.
"In recent years, pharmacists have been
taking on more responsibilities such as helping
diabetics develop medication plans," says
Adam Sonfield, a public policy associate for
the Washington-based Alan Guttmacher Institute.
"In some states, pharmacists are even
being allowed to dispense emergency contraception
without a doctor's prescription. Today, they
hold more power over our medical decisions
than ever before."
On the state as well as the federal level, this
is helping to bring the battle over prescription
access to a head.
"The anti-choice movement is using prescription
access to advance its agenda," says Karen
Pearl, interim president of the New York-based
Planned Parenthood Federation of America. "But
with new congressional legislation and with
other initiatives, pro-choice organizations
are fighting to prevent them from imposing
their ideology on American women, 95 percent
of whom use these medications at some point
in their lives."
In mid-April, Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.),
and Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), introduced
bills that would require pharmacies to either
fill these prescriptions immediately or forward
them straight to other drugstores.
States Adopt 'Conscience Clauses'
In recent years, a growing number of states have
started adopting "conscience clauses"
for pharmacists. "These laws say pharmacists
can step out of the way, but can't get in the
way," explains Rod Shafer of the Washington
State Pharmacy Association.
Originally, these laws were meant to safeguard
pharmacists who objected to dispensing drugs
that could be used in assisted suicide (which
Oregon legalized in 1994 and which other states
have considered sanctioning).
But pro-choice advocates say that in recent years,
policies designed to honor pharmacists' ethics
have been used to fuel a disturbing trend.
"Just as anti-choice ambulance drivers have
started refusing to transport patients for
emergency abortions, anti-choice pharmacists
have started exploiting existing pharmacy provisions
and lobbying for new ones," says Eve Gartner,
a senior attorney at the New York-based Planned
Parenthood Federation of America.
"Pharmacists have been asserting their right
to exercise conscience for decades," counters
Casey Mattox of the Center for Law and Religious
Freedom, an Annandale, Va., firm that represents
druggists with objections to birth control
pills and emergency contraception. "In
fact, they have been refusing to dispense birth
control pills since they were first developed
30 years ago. All that's new are laws that
could force pharmacists to either fill prescriptions
over their moral or religious beliefs or leave
their profession."
In the past six months, 14 states have considered
"conscience clauses" that would allow
pharmacists to opt out of dispensing drugs
to which they have ethical objections. Four
states (Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, and
South Dakota) have already enacted such laws.
And four others (California, West Virginia,
Missouri and New Jersey) are weighing laws
that would protect customers' ability to get
prescriptions filled.
The clash may be most contentious in Illinois,
where Gov. Rod Blagojevich moved on April 1
to issue an emergency rule requiring pharmacies
that carry contraceptives to fill birth control
and morning-after pill prescriptions "without
delay."
In mid-April, three Illinois pharmacists lashed
back by suing Blagojevich, alleging that his
rule violates laws on religious freedom.
"The political climate has brought us to
a place where pharmacists feel emboldened to
obstruct access to health care in the guise
of religion," says Rachel Laser, senior
council at the Washington-based National Women's
Law Center.
Anti-Choice Definition of Pregnancy
The Chicago-based American College of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists and the Bethesda-based National
Institutes of Health both define pregnancy
as beginning at implantation (when the united
sperm and egg nest in the uterine lining).
Some anti-choice pharmacists, however, define
pregnancy as beginning earlier, when the sperm
and egg first unite before implantation.
This difference is crucial when it comes to birth
control pills and emergency contraception (which
reduces a woman's risk of becoming pregnant
if taken within 72 hours of unprotected sex).
Both the pill and emergency contraception can
prevent the united sperm and egg from implanting
in the uterus, avoiding a pregnancy or preventing
"life" as some anti-choice proponents
define it.
The most vocal group of pharmacists espousing
the pregnancy-at-fertilization argument is
Pharmacists for Life International, an anti-choice
organization based in Powell, Ohio, with 1,600
members on six continents.
The organization's current president, Karen Brauer,
was fired in 1996 from a Kmart pharmacy in
Delhi, Ohio, for refusing to fill a customer's
birth control prescription then lying to the
customer by claiming the pharmacy did not carry
her medication in the first place. Brauer's
case was one of the first incidents of pharmacy
refusal and has been used as a rallying cry
for her organization's cause.
Pharmacists for Life, which did not return Women's
eNews' calls for comment, defends druggists'
rights to not only refuse to fill prescriptions,
but to refuse to transfer them to other pharmacies.
On its Web site, the organization calls birth
control pills "chemical abortion"
an "evil" and a form of "baby
killing."
Such extreme views are actually relatively rare
among the country's approximate 200,000 pharmacists,
says Kathy Besinque, an associate professor
at the University of Southern California School
of Pharmacy in Los Angeles.
"When it comes to birth control and emergency
contraception access, surveys show that only
9 percent of pharmacists have qualms about
these medications, but that even they are dispensing
these drugs nonetheless," she said.
The Washington-based American Pharmacists Association
maintains that pharmacists can refuse to fill
prescriptions based on moral or religious objections,
provided they have another pharmacist on hand
to do the job or transfer prescriptions to
a nearby pharmacy.
"If the pharmacist is the only one practicing
in a rural area, he or she can alert local
doctors and have them dispense medications
instead," says Susan Winckler, a spokesperson
for the association.
--With additional reporting by WeNews correspondent
Cynthia L. Cooper.
Molly M. Ginty is a freelance writer based
in New York City
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