Here’s a pharmacist’s testimony on the occasion of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich legislating his immorality on others and trying to force pharmacists to participate in what they regard as an abomination:
Quote from:
pfli.org/peggypacetestimony_june05.html
Quote - bolded emphases mine:
**TESTIMONY
Public Hearing on Proposed Amendment to Illinois Pharmacy Practice Act **
June 2, 2005 …I am a licensed pharmacist in Illinois. I’m sharing testimony with you to explain why I believe the governor’s emergency rule is bad for the people of Illinois, and bad for the pharmacy professionals in this state. I work for a large chain at a southern Illinois location. Prior to working at my current location, I worked for the same chain at a Missouri location, where the pharmacy manager decided not to stock the morning after pill… …I transferred to an Illinois location of the same chain that did stock the morning after pill. I was also aware of the Illinois Health Care Right of Conscience Act of 1997, and the protection it guarantees to health care personnel like me. The governor’s rule is in direct violation of that Act.
I cannot in good conscience dispense a drug that is designed to destroy human life. This drug’s action cannot be accounted for in its effect on mucous, since it is taken post-coitally, and fertility specialists tell us that the sperm are already at the distal end of the fallopian tube, where fertilization takes place, within 20 to 30 minutes. Daily progestin administration only inhibits ovulation in about half of the women who use it, so the ability of this drug to inhibit ovulation, after only being taken twice during a woman’s cycle (12 hours apart) is questionable. The mechanism of action which inhibits implantation of an embryo, living and human, is in large part responsible for its effect. I understand that the morning after pill is classed as a contraceptive. I also understand that the reason it is called a contraceptive, and not an abortifacient, is because the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, in 1965, redefined the terms “pregnancy” and “conception” to now only mean after implantation of an embryo has occurred. However, embryologists world-wide agree unanimously that time zero for human life is fertilization, not implantation, which doesn’t begin until the embryo is about 7 days old. This drug would therefore be more properly termed a “contraimplantive”, rather than a contraceptive. Further, to describe this drug as ending the life of a “fertilized egg” is scientifically incorrect, since a fertilized egg is properly called an embryo. But
the issue before us is not some arcane redefining of medical terms, but the real human right not to participate in purposefully killing another human being in early development…
…In order to comply with this rule, I have to pretend that what I believe is false. My Christian faith, which informs my morals, is not a whim or a personal feeling that I can set aside when I go to work each day. Therefore,
I cannot and will not participate in the ending of a human life. Does the governor think that by making a rule a public law, he has settled this moral issue? Does he also intend that in order to practice pharmacy in this state I must adopt his world-view, which includes abortion on demand, as my own? Since we cannot agree on an objective moral truth, why must I accept his demand to participate in killing as the moral absolute? Everything I do as a pharmacist is an act of moral conscience. For example, many times I have had to advise a physician of a dosage error for a patient. Other times I’ve had to contact the prescriber because of a drug interaction, or a disease state contraindication, and I do not dispense the drug until such time as I can discuss with him or her how to proceed. Still other times I refuse to fill a habit-forming drug when it is clear that the patient is overusing it, and may, in fact, be forming an unhealthy habit that the prescribing physician never intended. In each of these situations, if I were to act otherwise it would be immoral, because it is immoral to harm a patient. These types of decisions are required by this licensing body, as an exercise of professional conscience, which is actually an outworking of moral conscience, that is, it is wrong to do harm based on professional training and experience. But this same moral conscience is what this rule is asking me to abandon…
…In all of the years that I studied pharmacy, “a patient’s expectations” was never taught as a standard by which we must operate. There were many standards taught us which are to govern the way we practice, but a patient’s individual expectations, because they can be incorrect or unrealistic, was never held out as the model by which we practice. Now, however, it seems that this has become a new standard, and must include that we do whatever the patient wants, even if it harms him or her; after all, the argument goes, the patient is entitled to live in a risky way. Is this really the change that this board wants to usher into our profession?..
…
We are grappling with the idea that no one should be forced by his government to do something that he finds morally repugnant…
…I know that convictions cost.
I know that taking a stand against the governor could potentially cost me my license and my income. Has this board considered the cost of running pharmacists of conscience out of Illinois? With pharmacists at an all-time shortage, does this one-size-fits-all moral code really serve the people of this state, in light of the fact that it will force the part time closing of some pharmacies? This would deny access to a far greater number of people to their life-saving medications. And all for one drug, marketed by one company, for one non-emergency, non-life-threatening indication. Thank you for your time.