Yes it is the same. And most doctors DON’T own their own business.
Ok, I used the wrong language. Many doctors are in Private Practice and therefore can pick and choose their own patients.
**Most doctors here work in multi-doctor practices where they DON’T choose their patients; either the patient chooses the doctor or the doctor is told to take the next patient in the line. **
Pardon. I didn’t realise that you weren’t in the US. Here, things are done differently.
I’m pretty sure that even in the USA, the proprietor of a business is not an all-powerful dictator, there are numerous laws severely restricting what he can make his employees do.
The pharmacist’s job is to give a customer the medicine their doctor perscribed. If they don’t want to do their job, the employeer has a right to fire them. As a business owner, yes, he is an all powerful dictator.
**As I said it’s obvious you don’t have much idea what a pharmacist’s job is. A pharmacist is not a doctor’s delivery-boy. **
Please, enlighten me.
Nice. How’d you like someone to “get you fired” because you didn’t give them exactly what they wanted when they wanted it?
If I were refusing to do my job I would expect to be fired. Not having something in stock or doctor errors are completely different from pushing your moral agenda.
**And you think supplying this stuff is somehow NOT pushing a moral agenda? ALL the choices we make in life have consequences. **
Once again, the consequences are mine to decide. Your job is to tell me the adverse reactions, not to tell me your religious beliefs.
The job is not morally objectionable. The profession of pharmacy is a noble one. The problem is that some people are trying to force pharmacists to ditch their professional ethics and do morally objectionable things. Boy, you know less than nothing about a pharmacist’s job.
Unless you are a compounding pharmacist, I have the job pretty much nailed. As a non-compounding pharmacist, when was the last time you put that chemistry degree to use? Please feel free to correct me if I’m wrong.
Hey, I’m doing my best but you’re spitting out so many errors about pharmacy that it’s hard keeping up with correcting them all. Firstly as I said before whether a medicine is extemporaneously compounded or ready-made, is completely irrelevant to the subject. Secondly compounding is a branch of pharmaceutics, not of chemistry. Thirdly as I said the main part of a pharmacist’s job is ensuring that drugs and medicines are used correctly for legitimate therapeutic purposes. And contraceptives and abortifacients are no exception.It’s a noble field of study I’m sure, but it’s not a profession.** I already explained the difference between pharmacy and pharmacology but you don’t seem to be taking anything in.** **Impossible. Professionalism is simply another name for morality as applied to the work of professionals.
**
As to your first comment, why is it irrelevant? If you aren’t mixing the medicines, what are you doing?
Your second comment, I have no idea. I will admitt that I don’t know the difference between chemistry and pharmaceutics. So I guess I’ve learned something.
Your third comment… you can ask what the script is for. It is important so that you can give factual assistance for proper use of the medication. What you don’t have a right to do is push your morality on someone.
Little lessons in morality come at us every day from all around whether we like it or not. Many people choose to ignore most of them, and many customers will ignore the chance to think about the morality of their proposed contraception/abortion. Nothing the pharmacist does threatens their freedom to ignore it.
That’s one small part of his jobNo-one suggested any pharmacist give a sermon, so please don’t misrepresent us.
Don’t misrepresent you? If you came to my door telling me your moral veiws, I could close the door. When I’m standing in line waiting for my perscription, I have no choice but to listen to your little speech on morality. That is sermonising in my opinion.
** I already explained the difference between pharmacy and pharmacology but you don’t seem to be taking anything in.**
And this was just downright rude. That’s ok. Your “noble profession” makes it ok to be an acemdemic snob I guess?