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niyad

(113,556 posts)
Tue Jun 26, 2018, 02:37 PM Jun 2018

Women Deserve Better from Walgreens--and Their Lawmakers

0dear fucking woman-hating "sincerely held ethical beliefs assholes" GET ANOTHER GODDAMNED JOB! fuck you for thinking you have the RIGHT to deny a woman healthcare because of what YOU "believe". And FUCK Walgreens for not standing up for women.)

Women Deserve Better from Walgreens—and Their Lawmakers



After receiving the heartbreaking news last week that the baby growing inside of her no longer had a heartbeat, Nicole Arteaga of Peoria, Arizona, was given the choice of a surgical procedure to remove the fetus or medication to induce contractions. Devastated, she chose the medication—but when she went to her local Walgreens later that day, pharmacist Brian Hreniuc refused her tear-filled pleas for access to the pill, claiming it violated his “ethical beliefs.”


Phillip Pessar / Creative Commons

The 35-year-old mother bravely shared her story on Saturday in a Facebook post that has since gone viral. “Last night I went to pick up my medication at my local Walgreens only to be denied the prescription I need,” she explained. “I stood at the mercy of this pharmacist explaining my situation in front of my seven-year-old, and five customers standing behind, only to be denied because of his ethical beliefs. I get it, we all have our beliefs. But what he failed to understand is this isn’t the situation I had hoped for, this isn’t something I wanted. This is something I have zero control over. He has no idea what its like to want nothing more than to carry a child to full term and be unable to do so. If you have gone through a miscarriage you know the pain and emotional roller it can be. I left Walgreens in tears, ashamed and feeling humiliated by a man who knows nothing of my struggles but feels it is his right to deny medication prescribed to me by my doctor.” According to the Phoenix-area school teacher, another Walgreens’ pharmacist at the store also refused to fill her prescription that day. She was directed to drive 20 minutes out of the way to a pharmacy, where she could possibly undergo the same rejection. Walgreens responded on Twitter by suggesting that the company’s policy strikes a compromise—between the pharmacist’s moral objections and the woman’s ultimate health—by requiring the pharmacy give the rejected woman an alternative. This isn’t good enough. Nor is it helpful to women held at the mercy of a pharmacist’s personal and possibly fluid notions of morality.

If Arteaga’s husband sought to fill the prescription, it seems highly unlikely that he would’ve been questioned about why he needed the medication or that he would be turned away. The medication denied to Arteaga was for misoprostol, which is commonly used for terminating pregnancies, opening the cervix for insertion of an IUD, and for treating stomach ulcers—a gender-neutral health issue.
Arteaga appears to have been unfairly singled out and denied the medication because of her sex, which is exactly the type of discriminatory treatment that should be understood as a direct violation of civil rights laws. An Albuquerque teen is currently suing Walgreens in federal court for just that reason: In 2016, the 13-year-old New Mexico girl was prescribed misoprostol to prepare her body for the IUD doctors said was necessary to treat her menstrual complications. When her mother went to fill the prescription, the Walgreens’ pharmacist refused based on his personal beliefs. “Had [she] been a man with a valid prescription for the same medication,” her lawsuit alleges, “the prescription would have been filled.”

In defending the lawsuit, Walgreens maintains that state law supports its store policy. Once again, that excuse falls short. Arizona, where Arteaga resides, is among a handful of states with laws that specifically allow pharmacists to refuse to fill prescriptions for religious or moral reasons without providing alternative health care options, such as transferring the prescription to another pharmacy or issuing a referral. New Mexico, however, is not. Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi and South Dakota have laws allowing pharmacists to refuse prescriptions and prevent access to medication; Alabama, Delaway, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Texas have laws that allow for refusing prescriptions but not obstructing access. These type of “pharmacist conscience laws,” which are often leveraged to restrict women’s access to emergency contraception, were among those passed in an attempt to circumvent Roe v. Wade. Overall, these laws and subjective limitations created by individual pharmacists disproportionately impact women’s reproductive health and their right to control their own bodies.

Proponents of conscience laws may believe the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision for the Colorado cake-maker who refused to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple based on religious beliefs supports the pharmacist in Arteaga’s situation to refuse to sell medication based on personal beliefs. But that conclusion would be amiss. The Supreme Court didn’t back the Colorado cake-maker’s decision to discriminate; it simply ruled that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission mishandled his case by not being neutral. In fact, the Supreme Court used the decision to double-down on the “general rule” that businesses could not discriminate just because the business owner has “religious and philosophical” objections.

. . . . .

http://msmagazine.com/blog/2018/06/26/women-deserve-better-walgreens-lawmakers/

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Women Deserve Better from Walgreens--and Their Lawmakers (Original Post) niyad Jun 2018 OP
I think even Ireland has more fair laws for women's health issues BigmanPigman Jun 2018 #1
and isn't that a sad commentary on this country. niyad Jun 2018 #3
Fucking right wing pseudo-Xians. Nitram Jun 2018 #2
exactly!!! niyad Jun 2018 #4
This is infuriating for several reasons. malthaussen Jun 2018 #5
I share your view. these assholes need other jobs--call centers, maybe? niyad Jun 2018 #6
I'm going to dump Walgreens 47of74 Jun 2018 #7
I have been after the local walgreens since plan b became otc--demanding that they carry it. niyad Jun 2018 #8

BigmanPigman

(51,627 posts)
1. I think even Ireland has more fair laws for women's health issues
Tue Jun 26, 2018, 08:49 PM
Jun 2018

than the US at this point in our history. Unbelievable.

malthaussen

(17,216 posts)
5. This is infuriating for several reasons.
Wed Jun 27, 2018, 12:15 PM
Jun 2018

I'll just add another one: why the hell is any pharmacist at liberty to deny any lawful prescription? They are not doctors. The customer is not their patient. They should have no say in anything -- just push the fucking pills and shut up.

"Sincerely held beliefs" my sorry ass. My belief is you should take your "ethics" and get a job which won't offend your tender conscience.

-- Mal

 

47of74

(18,470 posts)
7. I'm going to dump Walgreens
Thu Jun 28, 2018, 04:47 PM
Jun 2018

I'm going to switch to a different pharmacy going forward. There's a local chain here that I'll probably go with if I can be assured that they'll not pull shit like this.

niyad

(113,556 posts)
8. I have been after the local walgreens since plan b became otc--demanding that they carry it.
Fri Jun 29, 2018, 12:18 PM
Jun 2018

will also see if the locals employ (in fundieville here) any of these "morally objectionable" types. I know it is corporate policy, but can certainly make my feelings known.

I am way past childbearing years, but I continue to fight for my friends, and all women and girls.

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