Morning-after pill allowed for age 17
Published: April 23, 2009
WASHINGTON --
Seventeen-year-olds will be able to buy the "morning-after" emergency contraceptive without a doctor's prescription, a decision that opponents denounced as a blow to parental supervision of teenagers.
The Food and Drug Administration said yesterday that it was accepting rather than appealing a federal judge's order that lifts Bush administration restrictions limiting over-the-counter sales of the Plan B pill to women 18 and older.
Women's groups said the FDA's action was long overdue because the agency medical reviewers initially had recommended that the contraceptive be made available without age restrictions.
U.S. District Judge Edward Korman ruled last month in a lawsuit filed in New York that former President George W. Bush's appointees let politics, not science, drive their decision to restrict over-the-counter access.
Korman ordered the FDA to let 17-year-olds get the birth-control pills. He also directed the agency to evaluate whether all age restrictions should be lifted.
The FDA's latest action does not mean that Plan B will be available immediately to 17-year-olds. The manufacturer first must submit a request.
"It's a good indication that the agency will move expeditiously to ensure its policy on Plan B is based solely on science," said Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, which filed the lawsuit.
Opponents said politics drove the decision.
"Parents should be furious at the FDA's complete disregard of parental rights and the safety of minors," said Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women for America.
Plan B works by preventing ovulation or fertilization. Pregnancy begins when a fertilized egg attaches itself to the wall of the uterus. If taken within 72 hours of unprotected sex, Plan B can reduce a woman's chances of pregnancy by as much as 89 percent.
Critics of the contraceptive say Plan B is the equivalent of an abortion pill because it can prevent a fertilized egg from attaching to the uterus. Recent research suggests that's possible but not likely.
The battle over access to Plan B has dragged on for the better part of a decade, through the terms of three FDA commissioners.
Among many in the medical community, it came to symbolize the decline of science at the agency, because top FDA managers refused to go along with the recommendations of scientific staff and outside advisers that the drug be made available with no age restrictions.
"The FDA got caught up in a saga. It got caught up in a drama," said Susan Wood, who served as the agency's top women's health official and resigned in 2005 over delays in issuing a decision. "This issue served as a clear example of the agency being taken off track, and it highlighted the problems FDA was facing in many other areas."
The treatment consists of two pills and sells for $35 to $60. Women must ask for Plan B at the pharmacy counter and show identification with their date of birth.
Supporters of broader access argued that Plan B is safe and effective in preventing unwanted pregnancy and could help reduce the number of abortions.
Opponents counter that it would encourage promiscuity and might even become a tool for criminals running prostitution rings, as well as for sexual predators.
In 2003, a panel of outside advisers voted 23-4 to recommend over-the-counter sales without age restrictions. But top FDA officials told their subordinates that no approval could be issued at the time, and the decision would be made at a higher level. That's considered highly unusual because the FDA usually has the last word on drug decisions.
In his ruling, Korman said that FDA staffers were told the White House had been involved in the decision on Plan B. The government said in court papers that politics played no role.
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Reader Reactions
Yes there are chances of younger girls getting older friends to get it, but you know what…who cares? It not as dangerous as the people who have adults buy them alcohol.
If a girl takes it after the 72 hour period…she is in no danger.
And the scientific proof can be found where?
Even if she is in fact pregnant, as no research has shown any increase in abnormalities among babies whose mothers took the morning-after pill.
So the research hasn’t been done so we just don’t worry about it. Remember Thalium. Oh the research wasn’t done on that either.
Congratulations on your caring attitude about our younger women. Just so everything is available to everyone you are happy. Glad I am not related to you or one of your unfortunate children if you have any.
Yeah, my step-daughter conceived 3 ‘downsides’. She made plenty of bad judgments before she died, but she chose not to consider her children ‘negatives’. Luckily for the 3 granddaughters somebody ‘cared’ and we have 3 wonderful blessings to be with us the rest of our days instead of sitting here mourning the loss of their mother as well as the loss of the possibilities of 3 children not allowed to live. The unfortunate thing about ‘what-ifs’ is they live and breath, or could. I just wish folks would give them as much of a chance as someone gave us all to be born and live.
No matter what, there is also going to be downsides to everything. Every medicine, every medical procedure, every advance in technology, every scientific discovery…every positive will have negatives. Yes there are chances of younger girls getting older friends to get it, but you know what…who cares? It not as dangerous as the people who have adults buy them alcohol.
If a girl takes it after the 72 hour period…she is in no danger. Even if she is infact pregnant, as no research has shown any increase in abnormalities among babies whose mothers took the morning-after pill.
Here is another “What if” - what if several days/weeks later a girl thinks she is pregnanat and decides take this pill. What happens then? Nothing/termination of pregnancy/miscarriage? With no oversite this will be used after the pregnancy has begun because there is no control. Abuse of this pill will follow and there is no way to prevent it because it is over the counter. How do you intend to solve those problems? Remember we are talking teenagers. What prevents a 14 year old from getting one of her friends from getting it for her and using it? Congratulations a new ball of trouble has been created.
Dave..no, the morning after pill does not un do anything, it prevents it. That is why is has to be taken within a certain time frame, because after that a pregnancy could already be in place and the pill with be worthless.
Any “what ifs” that a female would have would be a result of an actual pregnancy being established. Meaning a positive pregnancy test and/or ultra sounds. With this pill, there is nothing to create a “what if”. It works like any other form of birth control, whether the pill, patch, condoms ect.
I’m confused. If you take it the morning after, the implication is it will undo what has been done. Resorting to mental and verbal gymnastics in order to make it into something it is not proves MY POINT about denying responsibility. The ‘what ifs’ will remain nevertheless no matter how much rationalization is applied to it.
Dave…that is exactly my point of why I support this. With this pill there are no what-ifs because it prevents a pregnancy from actually occuring. This isn’t an abortion pill, which terminates an already existing pregnancy. This is used to prevent it, which is similar to the way any form of birth control is used. This way, if protection fails or is not used, a girl has the right to go to the pharmacy and discreetly get this pill to ensure she is not pregnant. It sounds a lot better then having a pregnant 17 year old that has to either go through an unwanted pregnancy or go through an abortion.
girldevl: Either way please consider the emotional and psychological damage to your daughter. You can erase pregnancies any number of ways, but the memories and the ‘what ifs’ remain. Women respond either by becoming callous and unfeeling to deny responsibility or guilt and shame accumulate. There are life-long consequences of pregnancy - the question is which alternative offers less harm to both mother and child.
I think this is a good idea. Parents can only do so much to stop their teens from having sex. The best you can do is talk to them, give them advice and hope they use protection. If my daughter was sexually active and whatever protection was being used failed, I would much rather her be able to obtain this pill discreetly and safely through a pharmacy then to actually wait to become pregnant and then go through an unwanted pregnancy or have to be subject to an abortion.
What a sick society. We won’t let kids smoke or eat transfats because it hurts their health. We restrict sugar-laced soft drinks at school because it is ‘bad’ for them. We enable them to remain childish and irresponsible by saying they have ‘rights’ to be so and punish authorities, both in the home and out, who try to give them guidance and direction. The media communicate an ‘anything goes’ mentality by showing teenage girls dressing provocatively and acting as well as speaking like streetwalkers. It’s ok for boys to listen to misogynistic rap music that demeans females and treats them as sex objects. It’s ok to be sexually promiscuous because we give them condoms and now a medication that allows them to solve a ‘problem’ after the fact. However, when they pick up on all these ‘signals’ and sextext as well as engage in sex we are scandalized, and want to prosecute them for sex crimes. The kids aren’t the problem - the so-called adults are.
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