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0 - Page 5 of 5 - Protection of Conscience Project Library
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Physicians and Execution

Gregory D Curfman, Stephen Morrissey, Jeffrey M Drazen

New England Journal of Medicine, NEJM
New England Journal of Medicine

Extract
Physicians and other health care providers should not be involved in capital punishment, even in an advisory capacity. A profession dedicated to healing the sick has no place in the process of execution.


Curfman GD, Morrissey S, Drazen JM. Physicians and Execution. N Engl J Med. 2008 Jan 24;358(4):403-404.

(Correspondence) Integrating Abortion Training Into FM Residency Programs

Gary W Clark, Kelly Latimer, Richard W Sams II, Gordon Zubrod

Family Medicine
Family Medicine

Extract
Abortion training for residents is not simply a “politically charged” issue, as the authors assert. It is a moral or ethical issue. As faculty physicians in family medicine residency programs, we oppose the introduction of abortion training on moral, not political grounds. German physicians “politicized” euthanasia and ultimately killed 200,000 mentally ill and disabled persons from 1939–1945.


Clark GW, Latimer K, Richard W Sams II, Zubrod G. (Correspondence) Integrating Abortion Training Into FM Residency Programs. Fam Med. 2008;40(1).

(Correspondence) More on Abortion Training Articles

Lucy M Candib

Family Medicine
Family Medicine

Extract
As we gear up to provide the basket of services important to our patients in the Future of< Family Medicine, residencies need the information in these articles to be able to best design and implement abortion training. Residents with a strong experience in reproductive health, including abortion, will be best suited to meet the needs of the women they will meet in their future practices.


Candib LM. (Correspondence) More on Abortion Training Articles. Fam Med. 2008 Jan;40(1):7.

Ethical, religious and factual beliefs about the supply of emergency hormonal contraception by UK community pharmacists

Richard J Cooper, Joy Wingfield, Paul Bissell

Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care
Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care

Abstract
Background and methodology

Community pharmacists’ role in the sale and supply of emergency hormonal contraception (EHC) represents an opportunity to increase EHC availability and utilise pharmacists’ expertise but little is known about pharmacists’ attendant ethical concerns. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were undertaken with 23 UK pharmacists to explore their views and ethical concerns about EHC.

Results
Dispensing EHC was ethically acceptable for almost all pharmacists but beliefs about selling EHC revealed three categories: pharmacists who sold EHC, respected women’s autonomy and peers’ conscientious objection but feared the consequences of limited EHC availability; contingently selling pharmacists who believed doctors should be first choice for EHC supply but who occasionally supplied and were influenced by women’s ages, affluence and genuineness; non-selling pharmacists who believed EHC was abortion and who found selling EHC distressing and ethically problematic. Terminological/factual misunderstandings about EHC were common and discussing ethical issues was difficult for most pharmacists. Religion informed non-selling pharmacists’ ethical decisions but other pharmacists prioritised professional responsibilities over their religion.

Discussion and conclusions
Pharmacists’ ethical views on EHC and the influence of religion varied and, together with some pharmacists’ reliance upon non-clinical factors, led to a potentially variable supply, which may threaten the prompt availability of EHC. Misunderstandings about EHC perpetuated lay beliefs and potentially threatened correct advice. The influence of subordination and non-selling pharmacists’ dispensing EHC may also lead to variable supply and confusion amongst women. Training is needed to address both factual/terminological misunderstandings about EHC and to develop pharmacists’ ethical understanding and responsibility.


Cooper RJ, Wingfield J, Bissell P. Ethical, religious and factual beliefs about the supply of emergency hormonal contraception by UK community pharmacists. J Fam Plan & Repro Health Care. 2008 Jan 01;34(1):47-50.