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ACLU Urges Wisconsin Court to Uphold Decision
Allowing Discipline of Pharmacist Who Refused to Refill a Prescription
for Birth Control Pills
February 5, 2007 MADISON - The American Civil Liberties Union today
urged a Wisconsin court to affirm a lower court decision upholding the
state’s discipline of a pharmacist who refused to refill a prescription
for birth control pills without ensuring that the patient would be able
to get her medication.
“We are hopeful that the court will agree that individual pharmacists
with religious objections should not be able to prevent women from accessing
contraception,” said Sondra Goldschein, an attorney with the ACLU Reproductive
Freedom Project. “Pharmacies should honor individual pharmacists’ religious
beliefs wherever possible; however, the patient’s right to obtain legally
prescribed medication should always come first.”
In 2002 Neil Noesen, a devout Roman Catholic pharmacist who has a religious
objection to the use of contraceptives, refused to refill a woman’s
valid prescription for birth control pills. Noesen went on to impede
the woman’s efforts to fill the prescription at another pharmacy. As
a result, the woman missed the first dose of her medication and was forced
to use a back-up method of contraception. The state Department
of Regulation and Licensing Pharmacy Examining Board subsequently took
disciplinary action against Noesen for his failure to adequately inform
his employer of his religious objections to participating in the filling
of prescriptions for contraception and for his refusal to promptly transfer
this prescription to another pharmacy.
“Although the Wisconsin Constitution protects individuals from government
interference with their practice of religion, it does not confer an absolute
right to disregard the rights or welfare of others,” said Laurence Dupuis,
Legal Director of the ACLU of Wisconsin. “Because women are the
sole users of birth control pills, refusals to fill these valid prescriptions
are tantamount to sex discrimination.”
A lower court ruled in February 2006 that the Department’s discipline
of Noesen for departing from a pharmacist’s standard of care was
constitutionally permissible. The Department held that a pharmacist “who
exercises a conscientious objection to the dispensing of a prescription
must ensure that there is an alternative mechanism for the patient to
receive his or her medication.” Accordingly, the Department
held, a pharmacist has a duty to fully inform employers of his or her
limitations on practice arising out of his or her religious beliefs. This
standard for accommodating religious objections and protecting patients’ rights
protects the public health, enhances patient autonomy, and promotes the
equality of women.
Today’s case is Noesen v. Wisconsin Department of Regulation
and Licensing Pharmacy Examining Board. Lawyers on the friend-of-the-court
brief include Goldschein of the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project, Dupuis
of the ACLU of Wisconsin, and Milwaukee attorney Jacqueline E. Boyton.
The ACLU of Wisconsin is a nonprofit organization, which has more than
9,000 members in Wisconsin.
Click here for Press
Release and Amicus
Brief in .pdf format
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