The US Food and Drug Administration today, finally, approved the emergency contraceptive pill Plan B for over-the-counter sales in pharmacies and clinics to adults, as the New York Times reports.
This news is excellent. We’ve been calling for it for a long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long,long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long time.
The change will help tens of thousands of couples in the Northwest make sure that all their children are born wanted. It will help prevent both unintended pregnancies and unwelcomeabortions.
So let us rejoice!
Now, the unfinished business . . .
As the Guttmacher Institute points out, excluding minors from over-the-counter access is a bad idea. The median age of first intercourse for American women is 17.5 years: in other words, more than half of American women are sexually active before their eighteenth birthdays. So why, exactly, refuse them access to a safe method of back-up contraception?
Furthermore, an appalling share of American women are raped or coerced into sexual intercourse before their eighteenth birthdays. Many of their victimizers are members of their extended families, intimate partners, or other acquaintances. And many young women are too ashamed to tell anyone. Why, exactly, shouldn’t a young rape victim—too mortified to get other help—at least have the right to walk into a pharmacy and walk out with Plan B, no questions asked?
MichelleV.P.
Thank you, Sightline, for your continuing concern and objective analyses regarding this important issue. For clarity’s sake, I am wondering what the * in the last paragraph is referring to?
Alan Durning
Sorry. Typo. Gone now.