When I worked as an addictions counselor one of my clients nearly bled to death following a spontaneous incomplete abortion. Good old Saint Francis in Topeka sent her home without doing a D&C because of their beliefs about abortion, never mind the fact that it was not an elective abortion. They told her not to worry, the fetus would eventually pass on its own. But it didn't, a portion became lodged in her uterus causing her to hemorrhage. I had sent her to her room to lay down, and hours went by before one of her roommates realized she wasn't simply sleeping, but had passed out due to blood loss.
Issues like this do not take place in a political vacuum. They have real consequences in the real world, and when women's basic health options are limited, their health is put at risk. Sure, a woman can go to a different pharmacy in most cases, but there will always be exceptions when it does matter, as was the case in 2009 when a rape victim was arrested on a juvenile warrant, was held for two days, and denied the morning after pill by a jail worker.
http://www.sptimes.com/2007/01/30/Ta...ape_vict.shtml
The simple fact is, your right to religious freedom does not give you the right to deny anyone access to legitimate health care needs. If a pharmacist can't handle that, McDonald's is always hiring.