Posted on 11/26/2003 8:06:19 AM PST by Scenic Sounds
PROPONENTS SAY such a move would greatly increase womens ability to get the pills in time to prevent pregnancy: preferably within 24 hours but no more than 72 hours after rape, contraceptive failure or just forgetting birth control.
The Food and Drug Administration says emergency contraception is very safe to use, but the question is whether women will understand exactly how and when to take it without any professional advice.
Indeed, the morning-after pill marks the first in a series of ever more complex over-the-counter switch decisions facing the FDA. Next year, the agency will be asked to allow nonprescription Mevacor, one of the popular cholesterol-fighting statins; it expects to eventually consider over-the-counter blood pressure medicine, too.
And as OTC drugs evolve from quick symptom relief to more complex therapy, the FDA is mulling whether its also time to change how some of them are sold perhaps beginning behind-the-counter sales for certain nonprescription drugs, where the pharmacist hands over the pills after giving health advice or, say, a cholesterol check.
Already, five states allow women to buy the morning-after pill directly from certain pharmacists without a doctors prescription. The state programs in Washington, California, Alaska, Hawaii and New Mexico aim to increase access to emergency contraception, especially on weekends and holidays when finding a doctor in time is particularly hard.
Now the maker of one emergency contraceptive brand, called Plan B, has asked the FDA to go further and allow the pills to sell over-the-counter nationwide, as is done in numerous other countries.
FDAs scientific advisers will debate the request next month. If FDA ultimately does end the requirement for a doctors prescription, the question becomes whether Plan B can sit on any drugstore shelf next to the cold remedies, or if the government prefers behind-the-counter access like in Washington and the other four states. A senior FDA official says all options are open.
IT NEEDS TO BE ON THE SHELF
Contraception advocates are pushing hard for no restrictions. They say easy over-the-counter access could spur wider use of emergency contraception, in turn preventing up to 1.7 million unplanned pregnancies each year and hundreds of thousands of abortions.
Emergency contraception is extremely safe. It needs to be on the shelf beside aspirin, says Dr. Vanessa Cullins of Planned Parenthood.
Morning-after pills are higher doses of the hormones in regular birth control pills, and have been sold under the brand names Plan B and Preven since 1998. Use is growing slowly: a Kaiser Family Foundation survey last summer found 6 percent of women of childbearing age had used morning-after pills, up from 2 percent in 2000.
Taken within 72 hours of unprotected sexual intercourse, the pills are at least 75 percent effective at preventing pregnancy. They work by preventing ovulation or fertilization of an egg. If fertilization already has occurred, they prevent the egg from implanting into the uterus the medical definition of pregnancy.
If a woman already is pregnant, emergency contraception wont have any effect. So it hasnt proved nearly as controversial as RU-486, the abortion pill.
But emergency contraception does have opponents, including the Vatican, who oppose any interference with a fertilized egg. Critics contend if regular birth control pills are too risky for nonprescription use then emergency use is, too and that broader access to emergency contraception actually could increase sexually transmitted diseases.
You will have people ... falling back on this idea well all just go to the drugstore in the morning and get a morning-after pill, says Wendy Wright of Concerned Women for America, an organization that opposes abortion.
Theres no evidence that access to emergency contraception makes women more careless about regular contraception, says Dr. Felicia Stewart of the University of California, San Franciscos Center for Reproductive Health Research & Policy.
Still, its a question FDA will consider. As for side effects, the quick-ending hormone dose from emergency contraception doesnt cause problems like blood clots that longtime use of regular birth-control pills can, says FDA drug chief Dr. John Jenkins.
Its proven to be very safe, he said. The fundamental thing wed be looking at is ... do the women understand the instructions and take it properly.
This could conceivably (bad pun) prevent some abortions, or do you consider any form of birth control a form of abortion?
Mark my words, this poison will make abortion anyone's "choice".
But from a pure public-safety and "safe sex" angle, this policy is a disaster. The message it sends is, "Don't worry about conventional contraceptives. You can always deal with it after the fact with a pill." While I agree that condoms are not the ideal solution for preventing pregnancy, STDs, and AIDS, the "morning-after" pill is certainly going to do nothing to stop these things. So perhaps we should point out that the "morning-after" pill actually sabotages the effort get get women to demand that men use condoms.
The doses used are intended to function as an abortifacient rather than as a contraceptive. Using these chemicals in these doses post-intercourse, you can't have one without the other.
This particular form of birth control can work as an abortion. If it keeps sperm and egg apart, it is not an abortion. If it kills a fertilized egg that would otherwise live if it weren't for the treatment, then its an abortion. And, yes, that means that conventional birth control pills are questionable, as well.
If I drop you a baby from a burning building and you purposely decide not to catch it and let it fall to it's death, even if you could easily have caught it, did you kill the baby?
What do you think it is, an alligator?
Looking at the diagram in #1, it appears that scientists aren't quite sure how it works, or there's the possibility it might work in more than one way. There are several ways they think it might work to prevent fertilization, it appears.
Although of course using a dependable contraceptive and reduction of casual sex are both preferable, I'd think one emotional advantage of the morning after pill would be that the woman wouldn't know at that point whether she was actually pregnant or not.
This should be changed to...
"be used to kill many innocent eggs!"
The problem is not giving women control over getting pregnant (though I can certainly argue that this has had negative as well as the obvious positive effects on society) but about deciding that you don't want to be pregnant after the egg has been fertilized.
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