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Buying birth control pills online may be safe, says study

- SAUMYA JOSEPH

Services based on the web or on smartphone apps are mostly safe and efficient for purchasing oral contracept­ives, a small US study concludes.

“If a woman is looking for easier access to birth control, this seems like a very reasonable option, in particular, for those struggling to find a provider or having difficulty getting into a doctor’s office,” said senior author Ateev Mehrotra of Harvard Medical School in Boston.

Experts have been concerned about the quality of services provided by online vendors. These companies allow patients to get their pills by mail or receive a prescripti­on by completing online questionna­ires, helping them avoid the hassle of having to visit a clinic.

To assess how easy it is to buy contracept­ives online and whether vendors provide screening similar to in-person providers, Mehrotra and his team recruited seven women, ages 20 to 29, who represente­d a variety of typical patients.

The volunteers included women with uncommon medical conditions that would make them poor candidates for oral contracept­ion, such as migraine with aura or a previous deepvein thrombosis, or blood clot. All the women were asked to purchase birth control from each of nine online vendors between October

2018 and March 2019, resulting in a total of 63 vendor visits.

Some of these websites, such as Planned Parenthood and The Pill Club, offer only

women’s health services, while others like Virtuwell and Lemonaid cater to a number of conditions ranging from erectile dysfunctio­n to allergies.

The online visits averaged 7.5 minutes, during which patients completed a questionna­ire. Phone and video follow-up sessions used by some vendors lasted less than 10 minutes, the researcher­s note in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Patients for whom oral birth control was contraindi­cated received prescripti­ons in only three of 45 instances, the team found. Two of those instances involved the same woman, who had a relatively rare liver condition that might be overlooked even during inperson visits to a clinic, Mehrotra noted.

Physicians may end up missing rare conditions as they may rely on memory, instead of a checklist, to ask patients about medical conditions or medicines that could make oral birth control unsafe or ineffectiv­e, Mehrotra told Reuters Health in a phone interview.

Automated checklists used by online vendors greatly reduce the chances of prescribin­g the pills in case of contraindi­cations, Mehrotra said.

For patients without insurance, the average cost of a 12-month prescripti­on was $313, the researcher­s calculate — comparable to getting a prescripti­on through a clinic visit.

The women either received their pills by mail, or their prescripti­ons were transmitte­d to a local pharmacy for immediate pickup.

Automated checklists used by online vendors greatly reduce the chances of prescribin­g incorrect pills

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