The following is am excerpt from a StatNews article Dana Singiser. Singiser is a partner at Keefe Singiser Partners in Washington, D.C., and a co-founder of the [pro-contraception] nonprofit Contraceptive Access Initiative.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has been quietly working with two pharmaceutical companies to expand access to contraception. They are working towards eliminating the unnecessary barrier of a prescription for the birth control pill, and allowing people to purchase it directly.
The last time the FDA approved a contraceptive product for over-the-counter use was in 2013, when it gave the green light to Plan B emergency contraception — which took 10 years of pressure to overcome political interference and social bias with science. I know because I had a front-row seat as a staff member working for then-senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) and later for Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
The process endured endless “pink tape” — the extra hurdles that women’s products must clear as a result of societal bias. This included the demand for multiple FDA applications, litigation, citizen petitions, and more. Two of the FDA’s medical panels ultimately recommended that Plan B be approved. For most pharmaceutical applications, that typically leads to full FDA approval. Instead, political leadership at the agency stepped in and overruled the experts.
For more than a year after that, public health advocates and elected officials urged the FDA to follow the recommendation of its experts. Exasperated, and with no end in sight, Clinton and Senator Patty Murray (D-Wash.) linked arms and blocked the confirmation of a new FDA commissioner for six months until they had assurances that the political interference would end. That prompted the approval of emergency contraception, but with an arbitrary age limit of 18.
For all of this wrangling and delay, the sky has not fallen since Plan B has been sold on pharmacy shelves without a prescription since 2013. Instead, 24% of sexually active women of reproductive age now report having used emergency contraception, the safety of Plan B continues to be confirmed after nearly 10 years of over-the-counter use, and the testimonials from women who have benefited are powerful and inspiring. With states bracing for abortion to be banned within months, many are stocking up on Plan B.
The Biden administration needs to learn from this experience and recognize the injustice of denying immeasurable health benefits by putting government barriers between women and contraception. It is critical that the new FDA commissioner, Robert Califf, treat these two oral contraceptive applications with the urgency and seriousness that women deserve.
With increased access to the most common form of reversible contraception, the rate of accidental pregnancies in the U.S. would decrease by 7% to 25%. No doubt this information led major medical groups, including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association, to urge the FDA to consider making the pill available over the counter.
The Biden administration has repeatedly and clearly stated its commitment to follow the science. There must be no exception when it comes to the FDA’s consideration of over-the-counter oral contraceptives. Sen. Murray — the same Senator who wears the battle scars from Plan B — laid out her expectations clearly at Califf’s confirmation hearing, saying, “[W]hen it comes to women — women’s health, I do expect the FDA’s decision to be made based on science, just as I do all of FDA’s decisions. So, Dr. Califf, I will be watching…closely to make sure decisions are governed by the data, not by politics.”
Full story at StatNews.
Teen age girls should never be using the contraceptive pill (aka birth control pill) as it can interfere with the building of their bone structure, among other serious problems. Although the comedian Bill Maher uses some vulgarity in his comedy, I thank God that he has come out telling the truth about the horrible medical problems of trying to change one’s sex, which only leads to more serious medical problems later in life. Kudos to him on that one.
One sure fire birth control measure is abstinence.
And, no prescription is required. It’s safe and natural. But, Big Pharma doesn’t profit off of it. It’s the perfect prescription-less birth control.
We already have prescription-less mind control.
And, federal control of inheritance, education, income, antihistamines, firearms and more. No prescription required. Although you do have to show your driver’s license to get Claritin-D, but not to vote.
It appears a prescription is still required for self control. Maybe that’s why it’s so rare.
Prescriptionless birth control is already approved. It’s called NFP.
Its still abortion, the pill prevents the embryo from implanting in uterus, its lost, a life wasted.
The Homeboys Greg Boyle SJ?