(SAN DIEGO) — A national pharmacists’ group has adopted a policy discouraging its members from providing death-penalty drugs. The American Pharmacists Association’s new policy could make it tough for death penalty states, like Texas, that have been looking at made-to-order execution drugs from compounding pharmacies as the answer to an execution drug shortage. The association’s governing body approved the policy Monday at a meeting in San Diego. The group lacks the legal authority to bar compounding pharmacies from selling the drugs.