• TooManyFoods
    link
    91 month ago

    It says that but further in it implies the doctor needs a reason to say no by giving reasons a doctor can say no. Good news though, feeling it violates their morals, ethics, or religion is a reason. Since it’s or, any good doctor with morals is probably going to use that.

      • TooManyFoods
        link
        61 month ago

        You know what, that’s an interesting (and I’m betting unintended) consequence

        • lurch (he/him)
          link
          fedilink
          31 month ago

          maybe even contraceptives and Plan B or medical variants of recreational drugs 😆 🍿

      • TooManyFoods
        link
        51 month ago

        Read the actual bill a little now. Of course it explicitly excludes HRT and potentially other things.

    • @FlowVoid
      link
      English
      5
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      That’s not what it says.

      Under the proposed law, a doctor can prescribe a drug (or not) as they already do. It requires hospitals to dispense the drug if a doctor prescribed it (exception: the usual religious nonsense).

      Currently hospitals can refuse to fill a prescription under some circumstances, if they disagree with the doctor.

      • TooManyFoods
        link
        11 month ago

        Okay so reading these is hard because of all the subsections and references to other laws, but it trying to read it, everything is complicated. Not exactly. If the patient has any prescription from anywhere, as long as it falls into the fda specifications etc etc they must allow it to be administered no matter what, but they don’t have to do the administration or dispensing. A doctor from outside and medicine from outside must be allowed in. If I’m reading the bill right, which is hard. Cudos to the news source for linking the bill.

    • Nougat
      link
      fedilink
      31 month ago

      So it’s really just giving legal shelter to quack doctors.

      • @FlowVoid
        link
        English
        21 month ago

        Not exactly. It’s taking away a guardrail that protects patients from quacks. If that results in a bad outcome, the quack is still responsible.