There is a difference between an EMS system and a private ambulance company. Refusing to transport a woman to an abortion clinic to have an elective abortion is not the same as refusing to transport a pregnant woman with an acute abdomen to the emergency department because she might require an abortion to save her life. Trying to make them the same in the name of bashing conservatism is ridiculous.
Actually, it is the same. Trying to make them different is ridiculous. In health care, no matter what section, you will very likely but put into a situation where you completely disagree with what is being done to/by the pt. But you know what? 1, it's the pt's choice, and 2, agree or disagree on a moral basis, it doesn't matter, it is still your obligation as a healthcare provider to perform your job is accordance with the pt's wishes and the standard treatements.
For those people who provide a medical taxi for people on a non-emergent basis, it doesn't matter where the pt want's to go...if your company agrees to take them there, it is now your job to get them there, whether or not you have a moral objection. Now, if you really don't like it, then please, feel free to quit your job and go somewhere else. Ethics are one thing, but morals are another, and allowing them to get in the way of pt care and your job is pathetic and inexscusable. Find another line of work.
How about this for an example: You work for a 911 agency that, instead of taking drunk bums to the ER, takes them to one of several homeless shelters. You happen to believe that the bums are at fault for being homeless and drunk and deserve no pity from anyone, and the fact that a shelter is available to them disgusts you. So you refuse to transport them anywhere. Is that ok since you are refusing on moral grounds?
That's a shocking comment. You can't conceive of circumstances within which you would object to something on moral (or ethical) grounds? What if a nurse refused to turn off a life support system for a terminally ill patient? Should she be fired? Or should another nurse, or the physician, or a family member do it? Maybe she should become a priest or a snake oil salesman (same thing).
Sure I can. But, my morals don't mean squat while working for the most part. I may completely disagree with what is being done, but, if the treatements are called for and are medically appropriate...guess what...they get done. Oh, and if a RN refused to turn off life support because it violated her conscoius or morals...then she needs a new job, and preferrable should lose her license.