correct.Originally Posted by admin
i'm at emory university school of medicine... last day of school is tomorrow
uncle_el what school are you at?
again, depends on the situation. say you're a doctor, and you're morally and ethically opposed to illicit drug use. you're in the emergency room, and someone who has sustained a gunshot wound to the abdomen is brought in by an ambulance. in obtaining the history, you find that the person is a drug dealer, and some crack fiend shot him.Originally Posted by Jaimecbr900
though you're morally and ethically opposed to illicit drug use, it would be stupid not to treat the guy... not to menition illegal!
now, say you have the same feelings about drugs, and you're in an outpatient clinic. the same drug dealer, now doing fine, comes to you for follow up. you'd have a right not to see him, but you'd be required to send him to someone who could treat him. in other words, you can't leave him in the wind.
i'm not sure if that helps or not.
the pharmacist who is morally and ethically opposed to abortion, and works at a pharmacy that stocks plan b, is under no obligation to fill that prescription. and he/she does not have to refer you to a pharmacy or pharmacist that will fulfill the prescription. in other words, the pharmacist's ethical and moral obligations are allowed to supercede the profession.
most pharmacists will fill pain prescriptions. but i suppose a pharmacist retains the right of refusal. usually, the hang up in pain prescriptions is not pharmacists, but physicians who are afraid/fearful of filling prescriptions for drug abusers.Originally Posted by microzimmer







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