What about a pharmacist that refuses to hand over the prescribed Zanex
or Prozac? I mean as long as we're going to talk about the possibility
of life-threatening danger. What about inhalers for asthma or
epinephrine shots for allergies? At what point does it stop?

Let's say the pharmacist believes that only prayer is capable of 
treating depression/asthma/seizures. Now one may ask, what the hell
would someone that believes this be doing going to pharmacology
school, but whatever, the possibility exists.

What about that? What is the pharmacist's responsibility/liability then? 

Apolgies to Erika (with a K, back in the USA), but while I agree that
a woman's right to choose is a top priority, I also believe that
pharmacists having a "choice" in whether or not to fill a
prescription, is ridiculous.


-- 
-- 

will


"If my life weren't funny, it would just be true;
and that would just be unacceptable."
- Carrie Fisher

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