Va. Pharmacy: No Candy, Coke Or Condoms
New Drug Store Follows Faith And Won't Sell Contraceptives, Even If Person Has Prescription
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Pam Semler, of Fairfax, Va., works the register at DMC Pharmacy in Chantilly, Va. on Monday, Oct. 20, 2008. The pharmacy bills itself as "pro-life" and carries no contraceptive products. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
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States across the country have been wrestling with the issue of pharmacists who refuse on religious grounds to dispense birth control or morning-after pills, and some have enacted laws requiring drug stores to fill the prescriptions.
In Virginia, though, pharmacists can turn away any prescription for any reason.
"I am grateful to be able to practice," pharmacy manager Robert Semler said, "where my conscience will never be violated and my faith does not have to be checked at the door each morning."
Semler ran a similar pharmacy before opening the new store, which is not far from Dulles International Airport. The store only sells items that are health-related, including vitamins, skin care products and over-the-counter medications.
On Tuesday, the pharmacy celebrated a blessing from Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde. While Divine Mercy Care is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church, it is guided by church teachings on sexuality, which forbid any form of artificial contraception, including morning-after pills, condoms and birth control pills, a common prescription used by millions of women in the U.S.
"This pharmacy is a vibrant example of our Holy Father's charge to all of us to wear our faith in the public square," said Loverde, who sprinkled holy water on the shelves stocked with painkillers and acne treatments. "It will allow families to shop in an environment where their faith is not compromised."
Divine Mercy Care is guided by church teachings on sexuality, which forbid any form of artificial contraception, including morning-after pills, condoms and birth control pills.
Earlier this year in Wisconsin, a state appeals court upheld sanctions against a pharmacist who refused to dispense birth control pills to a woman and wouldn't transfer her prescription elsewhere. Elsewhere, at least seven states require pharmacies or pharmacists to fill contraceptive prescriptions, according to the National Women's Law Center. Four states explicitly give pharmacists the right to turn away any prescriptions, the group said.
The Virginia store's policy has drawn scorn from some abortion rights groups, who have already called for a boycott and collected more than 1,000 signatures protesting the pharmacy.
"If this emboldens other pharmacies in other parts of the state, it could really affect low-income and rural women in terms of access," said Tarina Keene, executive director of the Virginia chapter of the National Abortion Rights Action League.
Robert Laird, executive director of Divine Mercy Care, believes many of the estimated 50,000 Catholics within a few miles of the store will support its mission and make up for the roughly 10 percent of business that contraceptives represent in a typical pharmacy.
Whether Catholics will be drawn to the pharmacy is uncertain. According to a Gallup poll published last year for an extensive study of U.S. Catholicism called American Catholics Today, 75 percent of U.S. Catholics said you can still be a good Catholic even if you don't obey church teachings on birth control.
Catherine Muskett said she plans to shop at the drug store even though she lives more than 20 miles away.
"Obviously it's good to support pro-life causes. Every little bit counts," said Muskett, one of about 75 people who crowded into the tiny shop for Tuesday's ceremony.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 53 CommentsYes, of course this RPh will continue to give Rush L his Oxy without a valid prescription. Because it is OK for republicans, ahem, Cindy McCaine, to abuse drugs.
People bringing their beliefs into such a business, that''s just going to bring them trouble. Be religious, for you, your choice. Leave everyone else out if it. You don''t see Jews doing this, do you? I''ve been into Jewish owned businessess (aside from kosher delis, ect) that sell pork and other prohibited things....they don''t force their practice down others'' throats.
Barnor Maine has a law when Adults can''t smoke in their cars when minors are in the car and city passed as the fisrt place in this nation. The people said* it is my car and I PAYED FOR AND i will if I want*MIND SET. It maybe their business but they have to do as the state says.
Contraceptives, and especially morning-after pills are essential and a woman''s right. Wonder if any policymaker in the Vatican can understand that with more birth control, there is less abortion; then women don''t use abortion as the contraceptive of last resort.
But, hey thats his right huh?
Sure is if hes doing this independent of any business requirements or government regulations, or business licenses to operate in our country.
But he is not. He should do his job, dispense FDA approved drugs.
Why does he not just screen people he sells Cokes to, skinny active ones get the Coke, obese people do not.
Posted by xentpro at 03:20 AM : Oct 23, 2008
WRONG!! YOU seek a LICENSE from the STATE when you open THIS type of Business. The LICENSE REQUIRES you to service the NEEDS of the Public as PRESCRIBED by a MEDICAL DOCTOR! When you REFUSE to fill a Prescription YOU have refused to fulfill the requirements of that LICENSE and it should be removed... PERIOD! IF this low life wants to impose HIS religion on People let him get a booth on the corner and sell bibles!!
Through some strange mental gymnastics followers compare children to arrows according to religious teachings. Best to have your quiver full! How better to deplete the environment faster and realize "end of days" so they can ride their magic elevator into the cold vacuum of space.
(unfortunately for Quiverful practitioners astrophysics was invented some centuries later).
Posted by Puzzler125
Amen to that. When I go shopping I don''t want to hear, "do you want politics with that?"
I just want to buy the freakin'' product or service, thank you very much.
Good point!"
Posted by MyOpinion381
Religion is a nasty side effect of the invention of language. Fortunately, not all are afflicted...
It can be prevented, with proper care and teaching that people can be ethical without throwing their money to some crazed mystic who lies about having an "in" with the creator of the universe.
I would not want to reward a liar, after all...
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