Because they are health care providing professionals and you are not.
Right, but the pharmacist is not privvy to the medical records/history of the patient; the doctor (who prescribes the medication) is.
I've worked part time in a pharmacy, you don't think the pharmacist knows what pills do what? I'd constantly have George the pharmacist tell me what these people had because of what was being prescribed for them.
I'm sure they have a clue; they have to ... how else could they dispense advice about the medication and ensure there aren't conflicts with other medications the patient might be taking? :shrug: Doesn't mean they also become a doctor and have the right to tell the patient they can't have it. They should refer the patient back to their physician, which they typically do.
And i've agreed with as much.
I'm not sure how I stand with the religious viewpoint of the issue as of yet, at first glance I'd have to agree with you. However, as I said before, some people don't assume this is a religious issue, not to them at least. Some people just feel this is morally wrong and they have that right to refuse a certain drug if it is conflicting with their personal morals. I'm a strict believer that you should not inflict your beliefs upon another, keep that in the private sector. If the pharmacist has moral problems with the case then he should kindly hand the case over to another pharmacist. Doing just this will save each parties rights.
If they attribute their "morals" to religion, it's a constitutional issue as I said and those "morals" should be overruled. If it's not a religion issue, their "morals" are no different than "opinions", which we both know are like hiney butts ... everyone has one. :shrug: