The most commonly prescribed contraceptive in America is getting easier to access, if you can afford it or live in the right state.
Why it matters: The role of of contraception has become more vital with mounting abortion restrictions across the U.S., a year after the Supreme Court ended the federal right to abortion.
- The FDA’s approval of the first over-the-counter birth control pill, Opill, in the U.S. on Thursday is a “a game changer in terms of access,” Dr. Julia Cron, chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology at NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital, told Axios.
Driving the news: More than 100 countries provide over-the-counter birth control pills without a prescription.
- But similar progress has buckled in the U.S. thanks to lengthy regulatory processes and limited research in reproductive heath, Dr. Raegan McDonald-Mosley, the CEO of reproductive wellbeing nonprofit of Power to Decide, said.
- Opill was the first birth control pill to be considered by the FDA as an over-the-counter option, and it could now […]
At least in some parts of the country, women have rights which they deserve.