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Plan B, now OTC in NYC
Comptine
post Nov 14 2006, 11:21 PM
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QUOTE
wnbc.com

'Plan B' To Hit Drug Store Shelves

NEW YORK -- The Plan B emergency contraceptive will be available over the counter in New York pharmacies starting this week, and City Hall is providing information about the drug on its 311 telephone information hot line, the health department said Tuesday.

Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc. said last week that the contraceptive, also known as the morning after pill, would be available over the counter in U.S. pharmacies this month following the Food and Drug Administration's decision in August to allow women to buy it without prescriptions. Girls still need doctor's notes.

When the FDA made that decision, Plan B was available without prescription in just nine states that had acted on their own to allow the over-the-counter purchase: Washington, California, New Mexico, Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Vermont.

But within the metro area, pharmacies are just now beginning to offer it over the counter. The Rite Aid chain said the drug has arrived in some stores and it expects to have the drug available in all its stores nationwide by the end of the week, spokeswoman Jody Cook said.

In New York, the assistant commissioner of the health department's Bureau of Maternal, Infant and Reproductive Health, Deborah Kaplan, said the city wants to spread the word about the increased access to the pill.

"Plan B is a safe and effective way to prevent pregnancy after unprotected sex," Kaplan said in a statement.

Barr Pharmaceuticals has sold Plan B as a prescription drug since 1999, but advocates say its over-the-counter availability is crucial to preventing unwanted pregnancies because the drug is more effective the faster it is taken.

Some conservatives oppose emergency contraception because they believe it is a form of abortion.

Plan B has no effect on a pregnancy if it has already occurred. It contains a high dose of the drug found in birth control pills and works by halting ovulation and preventing fertilization of the egg.

Barr did not know how many pharmacies would be selling the drug in New York, company spokeswoman Carol Cox said. The company's Duramed Pharmaceuticals unit was granted three-year exclusive marketing rights to the drug by the FDA.


Before the debate was whether or not women should even be able to go to a doctor to get this emergency conception. Now the debate is whether or not women can just walk into the pharmacy to get it.

Although, I am pro-choice, I think this might end up being a quick-fix/birth control method for a lot of girls who have sex carelessly. But then, the point of emergency conception is to take it before time runs out. What if the woman cannot receive care in time? It might not even be careless, unprotected sex. It could be a broken condom or sexual assault (for women who are afraid of the after effects of a sexual assault but too scared to go get help).

What do you think? Do you think that this is even worse than abortion itself? Now, anyone (above 18 or, if they are under 18, with a prescription) can walk into like Rite Aid and get it, instead of going through screenings, tests, and counseling like before?
 
lKVNiiKINKYl
post Nov 15 2006, 05:57 PM
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I read somewhere about there being really bad side effects I think and I'll post it later when I look into it.
All I am thinking right now is, if its Plan B, what was wrong with Plan A? I am pro-life so I am against this idea just because if sex is going to happen for whatever reason (even if you are raped), I strongly believe that the baby deserves a chance unless harm is to come to the mother.
 
Comptine
post Nov 15 2006, 06:31 PM
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QUOTE(Lo Mein @ Nov 15 2006, 5:57 PM) *
I read somewhere about there being really bad side effects I think and I'll post it later when I look into it.
All I am thinking right now is, if its Plan B, what was wrong with Plan A? I am pro-life so I am against this idea just because if sex is going to happen for whatever reason (even if you are raped), I strongly believe that the baby deserves a chance unless harm is to come to the mother.


what type of harm? like actual physical harm such as if the woman keeps the baby, she could very well die? or ... are you including mental harm in there as well? forcing a woman to carry a child of rape has unpredictable consequences.

Plan B is another route for many women so they would not be forced into a corner where they have to decided between abortion (which is much more drastic) or keeping a baby they didn't want in the first place.
 
lKVNiiKINKYl
post Nov 16 2006, 10:55 PM
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i lieed i read up on it and i must have been thinking about something else but what i did find on this which is unique is you have to take it exactly 24 hours after intercourse or else it wont be as effective...but then again i guess thats what applies to a lot of birth control
 
Comptine
post Nov 16 2006, 10:59 PM
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QUOTE(Lo Mein @ Nov 16 2006, 10:55 PM) *
i lieed i read up on it and i must have been thinking about something else but what i did find on this which is unique is you have to take it exactly 24 hours after intercourse or else it wont be as effective...but then again i guess thats what applies to a lot of birth control


72 hours.
 
lKVNiiKINKYl
post Nov 17 2006, 02:45 PM
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my google-ing skills freaking suck
 
radhikaeatsraman
post Nov 17 2006, 06:51 PM
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oooh yeah.
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I'm extremely happy about this decision. I, personally, am pro-choice as well, and I believe women should have access to Plan B without a prescription. However, I still believe girls should have OTC access as well. They are simply not ready to take care of a child at that age and should have an option to prevent pregnancy before having to go through with an abortion. Some states require parental notification or consent before an abortion, which gives an even more compelling reason to allow underaged girls OTC access to Plan B. The facts are there: Plan B is safe for any woman to take, regardless of age, and it should be allowed without a prescription just as condoms for men and boys are.

A person's sex life is no business of the government. It is between them, their partner(s), and (maybe) their parents.
 

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