Pharmacist's Conscience Rights
Conscience Rights Under Attack
The civil
rights of people working in health care are under attack at all
levels. Individual employers discipline and even fire those who
insist on honoring their own consciences. Nurses, doctors, and
pharmacists are among those who have faced unemployment because
they refused to participate in unethical “medical”
interventions.
The most recent attack
on health care conscience rights targets pharmacists. A new trend
across the nation seeks to destroy pharmacists’ ability
to decline to provide drugs that destroy human life. Thinking
that this doesn’t affect nurses and others in health care
is a serious mistake.
The legalization of
physician assisted suicide and eventually of euthanasia, coupled
with the loss of conscience rights, could mean that nurses would
be required to administer lethal drugs that doctors would be required
to prescribe to a patient who may or may not consent to being
killed.
A few states have enacted
laws protecting pharmacists but many other states, including California,
are currently entertaining legislation that could deny pharmacists’
conscience rights.
California along with
most of the United States of America suffers from a nursing shortage.
Yet many of our legislators have expressed opinions that people
in the health professions should not be permitted to exercise
conscience. In 2006 the Chair of the California Assembly Judiciary
Committee, for example, stated that people who object to providing
any legalized services such as abortion and physician assisted
suicide if eventually legalized should not enter the health care
professions. He expressed an opinion that any patient should be
able to demand any legal service from any healthcare professional
even in violation of the provider’s conscience and even
though a patient can get the services from someone else. He said
that conscientious objectors should seek careers elsewhere. This
philosophy, put into practice, would be very damaging to our society.
It would lead to even greater nursing shortages as droves of nurses
would have to withdraw from the profession. Other categories of
health professionals would be similarly affected.
It makes absolutely
no sense to compel individuals to act against their consciences,
especially in view of shortages in various healthcare professions.
There is no freedom unless all are free. That means that the civil
rights of pharmacists, doctors, nurses, and all other healthcare
entities must be protected. No one should have a right to violate
another’s rights. A patient’s right to procure certain
services stops where that choice violates the rights of other
individuals.
The nationwide trend
of attack on conscience affects all who are involved in the healthcare
industry. An attack on one is an attack on every one. We must
stand together to protect conscience rights universally. Even
those whose ideologies differ from those of CNES should recognize
the danger to their own constitutional and civil rights should
conscience rights be abolished for some.
Relighting
the Lamp