Yuma Sun

Ariz. pharmacist denies woman miscarriag­e drug on moral grounds

-

PEORIA — The Arizona State Board of Pharmacy will investigat­e the complaint of a woman who says a Walgreens pharmacist refused to give her medication necessary to end her pregnancy after her baby stopped developing.

The woman, who the Arizona Republic identified as Nicole Arteaga, described in a viral Facebook post how she was publicly humiliated when attempting to fill the prescripti­on to end her pregnancy — a pregnancy she wanted, but needed to terminate because she would ultimately miscarry. She says the pharmacist refused to fill the prescripti­on with other customers within earshot and she left the location in tears with her 7-year-old child by her side.

Arteaga was able to fill her prescripti­on at a different location later, and filed a complaint with the Arizona State Board of Pharmacy.

Kam Gandhi, executive director at the board, said that the agency hasn’t talked to Arteaga or the pharmacist yet, but will aim to do a full investigat­ion before the board’s next meeting in August, Gandhi said.

“Obviously it’s a sensitive matter, and we have to approach it delicately,” he said. “If we get everything in order, we’ll present it at the August meeting.”

Arizona is one of six states that permit pharmacist­s to refuse to fill prescripti­ons on moral or religious grounds without requiring a referral or transfer of the prescripti­on, according to the National Women’s Law Center. The law specifical­ly mentions abortion medication or emergency contracept­ion, and says medical profession­als like pharmacist­s must state their objection in writing.

Gandhi said that part of the law hasn’t been interprete­d by the board before.

“Does it have to be presented to the patient, does it have to be at the store, or does it have to be in the pharmacist’s personnel file?” he said. “That’s what’s up in the air.”

Once the investigat­ion is presented to the board, it can determine whether to dismiss the complaint or take further action. That could include a type of warning letter, civil penalties, a voluntary surrender of license or continued education, Gandhi said.

Arteaga also said she had contacted Walgreens’ corporate office. On Monday, the company was tweeting replies to individual­s who were outraged by Arteaga’s post.

Some customers said they were taking their prescripti­on business elsewhere. Walgreens pushed out multiple repeated responses. In one, the company said it apologized to the patient about how the situation was handled. It also said it was looking into the matter further, while another message explained store policies.

“Our policy allows pharmacist­s to step away from filling a prescripti­on for which they have a moral objection,” the tweet read. “At the same time, they are also required to refer the prescripti­on to another pharmacist or manager on duty to meet the patient’s needs in a timely manner.”

The company told The Associated Press on Monday that the pharmacist in question was the only one on duty at the time, so he called another location to serve the patient.

Gretchen Borchelt, the vice president of reproducti­ve rights and health for the National Women’s Law Center, said it’s unclear how many women are affected by such laws because few may come forward like Arteaga did. Borchelt said her group has heard of women being denied prescripti­ons in at least 26 states since 2000.

“I think it’s happening more than people realize,” she said.

Tayler Tucker, a media representa­tive for Planned Parenthood Advocates of Arizona, said the organizati­on has been advocating for change in the refusal policy since it was passed in 2009. She said the law steps into the relationsh­ip between a woman and her provider — a woman could become ill by not properly dealing with a miscarriag­e, she said.

“We’re literally endangerin­g people by stepping in in these ways, and that definitely is a huge concern,” she said.

Arteaga found out she was pregnant about two months ago and was being monitored weekly because of a prior miscarriag­e. Last week, Arteaga’s doctor told her that her baby had stopped developing and she would ultimately miscarry. Her doctor gave her the prescripti­on after she opted to use medication to terminate the pregnancy instead of a procedure.

“I get it we all have our beliefs,” she wrote. “But what he failed to understand is this isn’t the situation I had hoped for, this isn’t something I wanted. This is something I have zero control over. He has no idea what it’s like to want nothing more than to carry a child to full term and be unable to do so.”

 ?? PATRICK BREEN /THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC VIA AP ?? NICOLE ARTEAGA TELLS HER STORY about how a Walgreens pharmacist allegedly denied her prescripti­on because it was against his ethics, during an interview from inside her home in Peoria on Saturday.
PATRICK BREEN /THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC VIA AP NICOLE ARTEAGA TELLS HER STORY about how a Walgreens pharmacist allegedly denied her prescripti­on because it was against his ethics, during an interview from inside her home in Peoria on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States