Saturday, February 11, 2012
 
 
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The Federal Drug Administration (FDA) has released Emergency Contraception [EC, also called Plan B, and the morning after pill, MAP] to the public Over-The-Counter (OTC). 

This potent drug will be on the pharmacy shelf along with aspirin and cough drops. Anyone over age 18 -- and as of April 2009, anyone under 18 -- may buy EC, even sex predators.

Many physicians and individuals opposed releasing EC as an OTC drug for many valid medical reasons. 

Older men who sexually prey on younger girls would pressure them to use EC; this would place these girls in serious danger of STD infection.

Also, the long-term effect of such high-dosage estrogen on young females has not been studied.

Women who take lower dosage "birth control pills" need a prescription; higher dosage EC/MAP does not require a physical exam and girls/women will not have the protective support of physician oversight.

We were told that EC would cut the number of surgical abortions in half.

In European countries where EC is freely available, abortion numbers have increased.

Those who promised the lowered abortion numbers are now admitting abortion numbers will not be lowered.

 
Gel Tested for "Safer Sex" (2/05) PDF Print E-mail

Doctors at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine have tested a gel that when applied topically in the vagina, may help prevent infection by both H.I.V. and herpes simplex virus. AIDS researchers have long sought such a microbicide.

The effectiveness of the gel, called PRO 2000 and made by Indevus Pharmaceuticals, was shown in a pilot study of 20 H.I.V.-infected women. Ten were treated intravaginally with PRO 2000, and 10 with a placebo gel. An hour later, secretions were collected and examined for evidence of viral infection. The study found that the gel significantly reduced virus levels while causing no inflammatory response, and a new 14-day study is under way to test whether repeated applications will cause unacceptable side effects. A much larger study of the effectiveness of the gel has been financed and is to include more than 3,000 women at nine different sites, Dr. Keller said.

Dr. Betsy Herold [senior author of the study, professor of pediatrics and microbiology, Mount Sinai] referred to the unfortunate experience with nonoxynol-9, once believed to be protective against H.I.V. but now thought to increase the risk of viral transmission by irritating mucosal lining in men and women.

[Dr. Marla J. Keller, a professor of medicine and the lead author on the study, presented the data at the 12th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Boston on 24Feb05;  8Mar05, New York Times VITAL SIGNS, By NICHOLAS BAKALAR] 

 
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