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The Federal Drug Administration (FDA) has released Emergency Contraception [EC, also called 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 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.

 
May 2005: Birth Control PDF Print E-mail

Study: Oral Contraceptives Boost Herpes Shedding

Ecuador Physicians Fight vs. MAP/EC

STUDY: ORAL CONTRACEPTIVES BOOST HERPES SHEDDING
For women with genital herpes, taking oral contraceptives can double the likelihood of actively shedding the virus and so passing on the infection, a new study shows.

The risk is also roughly doubled when women have bacterial vaginosis -- vaginal infection characterized by heavy discharge -- or when the vagina is colonized by group B strep.

"Even if they are modest associations, they are important because of the widespread use of contraceptives and also because bacterial vaginosis and group B strep are very common vaginal conditions," Dr. Thomas L. Cherpes of Magee-Womens Research Institute at the University of Pittsburgh, the study's lead author, told Reuters Health.

The study is the largest to date to look at factors involved in shedding of genital herpes virus, HSV-2, in women free of HIV infection. If the findings are confirmed, Cherpes added, "treatment of STDs and other vaginal coinfections may represent a method of decreasing transmission of HSV-2."

Cherpes said he and his colleagues had originally theorized that bacterial vaginosis would increase HSV-2 shedding. "We were quite surprised to find the association between group B strep colonization and HSV-2 shedding," he said.

That's because group B strep vaginal infection is often considered a mild condition that does not cause ill effects in women who are not pregnant, he explained.

In the current study, published in the medical journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, the researchers followed 330 women with HSV-2 for a year, taking vaginal swabs and smears every four months.

Bacterial vaginosis increased the likelihood of viral shedding 2.3 times, while women with group B strep colonization were 2.2 times likelier to shed HSV-2. Women on oral contraceptives had 1.8 times higher odds of shedding the virus.

Just why viral shedding is increased in these circumstances is unclear, Cherpes said, and investigating them could provide important clues to managing herpes infection. "If we understand why these conditions are permissive toward genital shedding of HSV-2 we can understand better what causes the virus to go from a state of latency to reactivation."
[Clinical Infectious Diseases, May 15, 2005; Reuters, 05/13/05; Abstinence Clearinghouse, 13 May 2005]

 

ECUADOR PHYSICIANS FIGHT AGAINST MAP/EC In 11/04, the court decision removed Postinor II (levonorgestrel), used in MAP, from the market. The case moved to the Constitutional Court (similar to the US Supreme Court). The Child and Adolescent Code of Ecuador, Article 20: “Children and adolescents have right to life from conception…Experiments and medical or genetic manipulation are prohibited from the fertilization of the ovum to birth”...

A 207-page report with 33 references to the latest medical studies concerning MAP/EC along with a video showing MAP’s anti-implantation mechanism of action (which violates the Constitution) was prepared for the Court. Pharmaceutical companies and the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) are on the opposing side of the case. [PRI Review, Jan-Feb05]

 
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