The FDA Will Consider Whether To Approve a Birth Control Pill for Over-the-Counter Use
If approved, the drug could increase access to effective birth control.
On Monday, Paris-based drug company HRA Pharma sent a formal request to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) asking that the regulatory agency approve birth control pills for over-the-counter availability. If approved, the drugs would be widely available without a prescription.
While the application follows the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade (1973), ending the federal right to abortion, HRA Pharma told the Associated Press that the application is unrelated to current political events.
In its application, HRA Pharma argues that oral hormonal contraceptive pills have proven safe and effective over the 50 years that they have been available with a prescription. Thus, it is time to remove the barrier of a physician for patients who would like to purchase them directly. "For a product that has been available for the last 50 years, that has been used safely by millions of women, we thought it was time to make it more available," said Frederique Welgryn, an HRA executive.
Currently, birth control pills are the most popular hormonal birth control method in the United States. The CDC estimates that over 9 million women use birth control pills, and a study from the Guttmacher Institute found that 86 percent of U.S. women using birth control pills took them at least in part for pregnancy prevention. The remainder of women say they use the pills for noncontraceptive reasons, such as acne or to mitigate severe menstrual symptoms.
However, gaining a physician's prescription for the drugs can be prohibitively expensive and time-consuming for many women—especially those who lack health insurance. Approving the nationwide sale of birth control without a prescription would grant many more women access to a safe, reliable method of preventing pregnancy without unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles.
HRA Pharma is specifically seeking the approval of a progestin-only pill for over-the-counter availability. Progestin-only pills are historically less popular than combination pills—which contain both estrogen and progestin—as they must be taken at the same time every day, whereas combination pills are typically effective during a broad window of time. For this reason, progestin-only pills are generally considered to have a lower effectiveness rate than other birth control pills. However, progestin-only pills contain a significantly lower risk of blood clots, thus making them an ideal over-the-counter for patients who have not first consulted with a physician.
HRA Pharma's appeal to the FDA is just one part of the larger political project to make birth control pills available over the counter. Currently, 12 states and the District of Columbia allow for the over-the-counter sale of birth control pills. The policies are broadly popular, with supporters highlighting the drugs' safety and the importance of reducing unplanned pregnancy.
Many adamantly pro-life politicians support over-the-counter birth control access. In 2019, Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) made headlines after replying to a tweet from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) calling for over-the-counter birth control. "I agree," he wrote. "Perhaps, in addition to the legislation we are already working on together to ban Members of Congress from becoming lobbyists, we can team up here as well. A simple, clean bill making birth control available over the counter. Interested?"
Following the release of the Dobbs decision, Democratic lawmakers unveiled legislation that, assuming the FDA approves an over-the-counter birth control pill, would require insurers to cover the full out-of-pocket cost for the pill. In a press release, one of the bill's sponsors, Rep. Ami Bera (D–California), wrote, "As a doctor, I know access to affordable contraception is critical for women's reproductive health." He continued, "I'll keep fighting to ensure women have access to quality, affordable healthcare – including access to full reproductive health services."
As more states ban or severely restrict abortion access, politicians and drug companies alike seem geared up to support over-the-counter birth control access. Among politicians, access to such drugs could prove to be an unlikely place for bipartisan support.
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"Over-the-Counter Contraception Is Immensely Popular. But Democrats Have Doomed It."
Remember when R's wanted OTC contraception, but D's were solidly against it in order to protect ObamaCare?
As a matter of fact I do. I also thought of that immediately.
Seems like reproductive rights have really taken a back seat to ObamaCare.
Barry O promise to codify Roe when he had a majority, but he and Nancy blew all their political capital on ObamaCare and lost the majority, without even touching abortion legislation.
Why do women think the Democrats actually care about abortion?
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A lot has happened since 2019.
Yeah, Afghanistan, inflation, gas prices... They need something to pull their numbers out of the shitter and their voters know they're NEVER gonna pass abortion legislation.
See? This is why we need a memory hole.
Why haven't women been screaming and moaning about contraception access? I think they should have.
That would make sense, wouldn't it?
Whatever you think about abortion, it seems vastly preferable to getting an abortion not to get pregnant in the first place.
They kind of have been.
Well, except it wasn't about access, it was just forcing other people to pay for it.
Amazing how asking someone to pay $20 for their own contraception every month suddenly was spun as a war on women and restricting their access to health care.
Yeh. this is what has always irked me about this issue.
Protect ObamaCare, or protect an effective campaign issue?
The only reason Rs are interested in OTC birth control is so that it can no longer be paid by health insurance. It's a sleazy way of blaming poor people for abortions
Democrats hardest hit.
They should make it over the counter already. The red states need this.
Don't forget how stringent the FDA has gotten.
If Tylenol was released today, it would NEVER become over the counter due to the possibility of overdosing. If Aspirin was released today, it might never be allowed at all.
"For a product that has been available for the last 50 years, that has been used safely by millions of women, we thought it was time to make it more available," said Frederique Welgryn, an HRA executive.
Millions of what?
Look, Frederique IS a biologist, so don’t question them.
I thought they had already looked at this and Planned Parenthood lobbied against it because OTC pills would cost $15 a month whereas prescription pills were free.
PP lobbied against it because if women can go get pills at CVS, PP can't make any money off it.
Yeah, former CO Senator Cory Gardner actually proposed a bill to make Plan B a true OTC medication, not one you had to get through a pharmacist. The usual suspects (Democrats and their NGO/newsmedia mouthpieces) came out against it ostensibly because of "healthcare safety concerns," but it was really because it was proposed by a Republican--a lot of the same NGOs that came out against it when Gardner proposed it, had supported such an initiative prior to that.
So the purpose is to raise costs for women who currently can't afford to pay. And you assholes think that is what works.
What a BFree response (B standing for brain). Which costs people more? $15 at your local grocery/market/store where you can walk up and get the pills during a trip you already were making? Or travel over to Planned Parenthood, get a prescription, then head over to a pharmacy and get them for free...which would probably take at minimum two hours...two hours they could be working and earning more than $15 at McDonalds even?
Qu'ils mangent de la brioche
Over the counter at home vasectomy kits will probably be available before over the counter birth control pills.
Over the counter sex change drugs will probably be available before over the counter birth control pills.
I think I need to get off the internet. I think you might be factually correct and not engaging in hyperbole.
Hyperbole that is likely to end up factual - unfortunately.
One problem with this post: Male to female over the counter sex change drugs ARE birth control pills
Different doses and combinations of drugs, but yeah very similar. They won't be approved for birth control use.
The result is a "woman" who is capable of neither getting pregnant without medical assistance nor getting a real woman pregnant, so it's long-lasting birth control.
"The CDC estimates that over 9 million women use birth control pills"
Does that seem like an inordinately small number to anyone else?
There are 167.5 million females in the US, of which roughly 2/3 are between the ages of 15 and 39, and just over 8% of them take birth control pills?
Are you questioning the honesty of the CDC. Dr. Fauci will meet you by the water fountain. Don't be alarmed by the hypodermic syringe, it's for your own good.
Most of the remaining 92% were using abortion as their birth control.
How many are using other effective birth control methods such as IUD's or contraceptive implants such as Norplant? Contraceptive implants are time-release capsules inserted under the skin, to release birth control hormones for up to 5 years. They are not 100% reliable, but neither is relying on a woman to take 1 pill a day and never miss a day. They cost less than pills in the long term, and many welfare departments offer implants for free.
If a woman changes her mind, a doctor can remove the implants about as easily as inserting them was. It's even possible for a woman to cut them out herself.
I think you really need to have this discussion with your father.
Not really. Women are incredibly fucking lazy when it comes to birth control. That's why a lot of them a freaking out about Dobbs, because they might have to make sure to keep a box of condoms in their nightstand instead of going bareback all the time.
Or they could, you know, just take a pill every morning.
I don't disagree that women are lazy about birth control. However, his conceptualization is incredibly flawed.
First, women are only 50% responsible for reproduction. Not every woman, voluntarily or not, is fertile for the duration of her demographically reproductive years and/or the pill is not the only method of birth control.
Only something like 5-15% of reproductive age women get pregnant in any given year. 8% seems like a pretty solid number and, while I could agree that it could be better used to prevent abortion, I'm a pretty conservative guy, and some might even say chauvinistic, and I still hesitate to say that Catholics shouldn't be allowed to refuse birth control or we really should be using the pill more effectively, damn the consequences.
Of course, as a Protestant married to a Catholic who takes birth control and has been 66% successful at planning pregnancies, my take has its biases.
They aren't without risk or side effects. I totally understand why someone wouldn't want them.
I know the newer IUDs are popular.
In its application, HRA Pharma argues that oral hormonal contraceptive pills have proven safe and effective over the 50 years that they have been available with a prescription.
Not for nothing, but how long have women been using talcum powder for feminine hygiene?
Technically the talcum powder is safe, its when its contaminated with asbestos that its not safe.
when its contaminated with asbestos that its not safe
No, it's still safe. The assertion that it's not safe makes some leaps both biological and mechanistic to ascribe cause/intent/fault.
Fuck the FDA
Everything should be over the counter.
supposed to be all up in arms about this?
I don't think this is the time to inject arms into a medical discussion.
It might cause the CDC to think guns are a health issue.
" . . . that has been used safely by millions of women . . . "
But only because highly trained and conscientious physicians were guiding them through the difficult process of taking a pill EVERY DAY.
Switching to OTC would cause serious disruptions in the policies and procedures of thousands of physicians, pharmacists, and Planned Parenthood. And major disruptions to pharma profits.
And those disruptions would flow through to donations to democrats!
But having to take a pill every day is, like, really hard. And, like, probably oppressive, or something. Thats, like, something for old people. I mean, really, who can remember something every day?
Right. Because one pill every one day is like 1=1, and that's math, and math is racist.