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View Full Version : Va. pharmacy follows faith, no birth control sales


lavender r dragon
10-21-2008, 06:59 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081021/ap_on_re_us/no_contraceptives_pharmacy

bolding, again, is mine

CHANTILLY, Va. – A new drug store at a Virginia strip mall is putting its faith in an unconventional business plan: No candy. No sodas. And no birth control. Divine Mercy Care Pharmacy is among at least seven pharmacies across the nation that are refusing as a matter of faith to sell contraceptives of any kind, even if a person has a prescription. States across the country have been wrestling with the issue of pharmacists who refuse on religious grounds to dispense birth control or morning-after pills, and some have enacted laws requiring drug stores to fill the prescriptions.

In Virginia, though, pharmacists can turn away any prescription for any reason.
"I am grateful to be able to practice," pharmacy manager Robert Semler said, "where my conscience will never be violated and my faith does not have to be checked at the door each morning."

Semler ran a similar pharmacy before opening the new store, which is not far from Dulles International Airport. The store only sells items that are health-related, including vitamins, skin care products and over-the-counter medications.

On Tuesday, the pharmacy celebrated a blessing from Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde. While Divine Mercy Care is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church, it is guided by church teachings on sexuality, which forbid any form of artificial contraception, including morning-after pills, condoms and birth control pills, a common prescription used by millions of women in the U.S.

"This pharmacy is a vibrant example of our Holy Father's charge to all of us to wear our faith in the public square," said Loverde, who sprinkled holy water on the shelves stocked with painkillers and acne treatments. "It will allow families to shop in an environment where their faith is not compromised."

The drug store is the seventh in the country to be certified as not prescribing birth control by Pharmacists for Life International. The anti-abortion group estimates that perhaps hundreds of other pharmacies have similar policies, though they have not been certified.

Earlier this year in Wisconsin, a state appeals court upheld sanctions against a pharmacist who refused to dispense birth control pills to a woman and wouldn't transfer her prescription elsewhere. Elsewhere, at least seven states require pharmacies or pharmacists to fill contraceptive prescriptions, according to the National Women's Law Center. Four states explicitly give pharmacists the right to turn away any prescriptions, the group said.

The Virginia store's policy has drawn scorn from some abortion rights groups, who have already called for a boycott and collected more than 1,000 signatures protesting the pharmacy.

"If this emboldens other pharmacies in other parts of the state, it could really affect low-income and rural women in terms of access," said Tarina Keene, executive director of the Virginia chapter of the National Abortion Rights Action League.

Robert Laird, executive director of Divine Mercy Care, believes many of the estimated 50,000 Catholics within a few miles of the store will support its mission and make up for the roughly 10 percent of business that contraceptives represent in a typical pharmacy.

Whether Catholics will be drawn to the pharmacy is uncertain. According to a Gallup poll published last year for an extensive study of U.S. Catholicism called American Catholics Today, 75 percent of U.S. Catholics said you can still be a good Catholic even if you don't obey church teachings on birth control.

Catherine Muskett said she plans to shop at the drug store even though she lives more than 20 miles away.

"Obviously it's good to support pro-life causes. Every little bit counts," said Muskett, one of about 75 people who crowded into the tiny shop for Tuesday's ceremony.

___

On the Net:

http://www.dmcpharm.com

http://www.naralva.org/instate/pharmacy.shtml


i'm glad wisconsin upheld sanctions against that pharmacist....if you don't want to fill it - fine, leave it for someone else to fill, give it back to me, whatever but you have no right to rip up a prescription....i know a girl in college who took birth control to limit her periods b/c she had bad anemia.

Ysobelle
10-21-2008, 07:03 PM
That thudding sound you hear is my head on my desk.

Taffy Saltwater
10-21-2008, 07:03 PM
This Catholic will not be supporting - in any manner - these people who refuse to do their jobs.

Gemdrite
10-21-2008, 07:07 PM
I DON'T AGREE WITH THEM, but I do applaud them for at least being upfront about their practices. You don't like them, fine, don't go there, and I think their practices are stupid to say the least, but at least you would know what to expect there. You have the choice to not go there, before you get there.

Ysobelle
10-21-2008, 07:20 PM
I DON'T AGREE WITH THEM, but I do applaud them for at least being upfront about their practices. You don't like them, fine, don't go there, and I think their practices are stupid to say the least, but at least you would know what to expect there. You have the choice to not go there, before you get there.



I completely agree with you. They're upfront about it, and that's fine.

The problem I have with them is twofold, though. As the NARAL spokeswoman says, it sets a really, really bad precedence, and not just in Virginia. The other problem I see is that, well, let's see: this strip mall has a pharmacy. I'd guess it'll be the only one in that strip mall. RiteAid or Eckerd or CVS comes along looking for a new location, they'd skip this area. So if you're looking for a place to get your BC prescription filled, this becomes a blackout area for you.

Obviously, in a really urban area, this isn't a problem. But what happens where there's even less choice? I think that's also what NARAL is talking about, and that's the part that really scares me.

Selena
10-21-2008, 07:23 PM
No sodas. And no birth control.

Well phooey. You mean using coke doesn't work? Who knew?!?! ::tinfoil:

wrenchwench
10-21-2008, 07:43 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081021/ap_on_re_us/no_contraceptives_pharmacy

bolding, again, is mine

Earlier this year in Wisconsin, a state appeals court upheld sanctions against a pharmacist who refused to dispense birth control pills to a woman and wouldn't transfer her prescription elsewhere. Elsewhere, at least seven states require pharmacies or pharmacists to fill contraceptive prescriptions, according to the National Women's Law Center. Four states explicitly give pharmacists the right to turn away any prescriptions, the group said.


i'm glad wisconsin upheld sanctions against that pharmacist....if you don't want to fill it - fine, leave it for someone else to fill, give it back to me, whatever but you have no right to rip up a prescription....i know a girl in college who took birth control to limit her periods b/c she had bad anemia.

That is what I have an issue with. I agree that if you don't feel you can fill the prescription then you have the right to refuse it. You do not have the right to trap someone else into your belief system.

The second point is something that has bothered me for along time. If a procedure is normally considered to be a method of birth control then it is only considered in that light.
I am speaking from experience. I recently had a operation that has its foundations in BC but for me was a health issue that needed to be addressed. I was pleasantly surprised and impressed that there was no trouble having it done here locally. This region is very conservative and heavily apostolic so I was sure I would be told that I needed it, but to get it done in a larger town/city. Had they refused me I would not have been able to afford the cost and time to do so and would have continued to have trouble with my health.

devlyn
10-21-2008, 08:39 PM
I was living in a very rural area when as a 12 year old I was put on BC pills because I had such awful anemia that I wasn't allowed to participate in phys. ed. I had black outs, tunnel vision, was dizzy, sleepy and light headed most of the time. I also missed several days of school each month because of the severity of my cycle. I KNOW I am not the only one who experienced this. Lots of girls and young women take bcp for this reason.

Eating lots of spinach and red meat and liver and popping iron pills didn't help. It just made the bleeding worse.

Fortunately, the local pharmacy didn't have any misplaced objections to filling my prescription so that I could actually function. Sometimes these prescriptions aren't just used as birth control, and I don't have any sympathy for a pharmacist not doing their job and just letting someone suffer like that. And I didn't have any options. There was 1 pharmacy in about 100 miles.

Also, as someone who would like to see a reduction in the amount of unplanned pregnancy, I feel that they are contributing to it, and as a result, abortion through their sanctimonious attitude.

surlywench
10-21-2008, 08:44 PM
That thudding sound you hear is my head on my desk.

I'll leave to your imagination what the metallic clicking coming from *my* direction, is....

This makes me so fucking outraged. I cannot even begin to put it into words.

So I'm going to sit here, and type nice.


Nice.

See?

surlywench
10-21-2008, 08:46 PM
No sodas. And no birth control.

Well phooey. You mean using coke doesn't work? Who knew?!?! ::tinfoil:

i love you so hard right now.

so. hard.

Gemdrite
10-21-2008, 09:17 PM
I completely agree with you. They're upfront about it, and that's fine.

The problem I have with them is twofold, though. As the NARAL spokeswoman says, it sets a really, really bad precedence, and not just in Virginia. The other problem I see is that, well, let's see: this strip mall has a pharmacy. I'd guess it'll be the only one in that strip mall. RiteAid or Eckerd or CVS comes along looking for a new location, they'd skip this area. So if you're looking for a place to get your BC prescription filled, this becomes a blackout area for you.

Obviously, in a really urban area, this isn't a problem. But what happens where there's even less choice? I think that's also what NARAL is talking about, and that's the part that really scares me.
I dunno, as RiteAid, Eckerd, CVS, Walgreens, whathaveyou, I'd take one look at this pharmacy and build right next door. If this pharmacy refuses to sell BC, among other random items, that means that I'd be the only one selling those items...that's like, automatic business right there.

UnicornBee
10-22-2008, 06:23 AM
My mom was put on BC for hte hormonal balance. She told me that if anyone refused her the medication because it isnt moral, she would let them have it. Its amazing how many say Catholics are against BC, yet I know several Catholics who are on or have used the pill.

I am on BC and I have seen a great reduction in my mood swings (no extreme anxiety, fewer spells of depression...its nice). If a pharmacist denies my script and refuses to transfer it, I'll be sure to find them when I'm going through one of my major mood swings because I didn't have that little pack of 28 pills.

Reading this makes me glad that I am using some of the more national chains like Walgreens.

I wonder if there is a sign in their window stating that they do not sell these items.

rosefaeries
10-22-2008, 08:48 AM
I am wondering if they sell condoms? After all, they are a form of birth control.

KissMeKate
10-22-2008, 01:39 PM
If you are going to have such an issue filling out a prescription handed to you by someone who was given it by a doctor who was in school a lot longer than you were, why are you in the pharmacy field in the first place? Why should you care about what other people are doing? It's none of your business! Sheesh! I think Illinois is one of the states where your prescription has to be filled or else it's an automatic firing of the pharmacist.

Mylilpinkpig
10-22-2008, 04:02 PM
I'm confused, are they filling any perscriptions at all? According to the article they are selling only vitamins, skin products and OTC medicines. If someone has a perscription for an antibiotic, are they filling that or sending them to the vitamin section?

Bean
10-22-2008, 09:28 PM
They are filling prescriptions, just not for birth control.

UnicornBee
10-23-2008, 04:56 AM
I am wondering if they sell condoms? After all, they are a form of birth control. It says they aren't