yeah, except for the laws against idolatry, adultery, and murder.
That being said different rabbis will interpret that differently. Some rabbis will say that the principle (pikuach nefesh) really only applies when a life is on the line, not just someone's comfort, so it wouldn't apply, for, say, prilosec or a painkiller or something that is just a quality of life med. Most rabbinic authorities are very liberal about medical care but it's not unheard of for one not to be.
(Also the Target pharmacists refusing to fulfill oral contraceptive prescriptions are also following a radical interpretation of the rules (which is to say, no papal bull ever said "and by the way you can totally take a job where your job is to police whether non-catholics get to have prescribed horomones and then just refuse to sell them"), so it would be fair turnabout for a Jewish pharmacist to do the same thing.)
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
That being said different rabbis will interpret that differently. Some rabbis will say that the principle (pikuach nefesh) really only applies when a life is on the line, not just someone's comfort, so it wouldn't apply, for, say, prilosec or a painkiller or something that is just a quality of life med. Most rabbinic authorities are very liberal about medical care but it's not unheard of for one not to be.
(Also the Target pharmacists refusing to fulfill oral contraceptive prescriptions are also following a radical interpretation of the rules (which is to say, no papal bull ever said "and by the way you can totally take a job where your job is to police whether non-catholics get to have prescribed horomones and then just refuse to sell them"), so it would be fair turnabout for a Jewish pharmacist to do the same thing.)