Antelope Valley Press

Amazon caps purchase of some contracept­ives

A similar policy went into effect at Rite Aid

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NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon is limiting how many emergency contracept­ives consumers can buy, joining other retailers who put in place similar caps following the Supreme Court decision overruling Roe v. Wade.

Amazon’s limit, which temporaril­y caps purchase of the contracept­ives at three units per week, went into effect, on Monday, a spokespers­on for the e-commerce giant confirmed to The Associated Press. The company did not share further details on what emergency contracept­ive products were limited for purchase, but a listing showed the cap applied to Plan B, the popular “morning after” pill.

A similar policy went into effect, Monday, at the drugstore chain Rite Aid, which has limited the purchase of Plan B pills to three units per customer due to increased demand, a company spokespers­on said. The limit applies to both in-store and online purchases.

Emergency contracept­ion is different from abortion pills used to end a pregnancy. Plan B, which can be obtained without a prescripti­on, contains a concentrat­ed dose of the same drug found in many regular birth control pills. If a woman takes Plan B within 72 hours of unprotecte­d sex, she can lower the risk of pregnancy significan­tly. But if she’s already pregnant, the pill has no effect.

Limiting purchases is standard practice that helps retailers prevent stockpilin­g and reselling at higher prices.

“Retailers are being cautious. They are trying to manage it,” said Neil Saunders, managing director at GlobalData Retail. “But I don’t think there are chronic shortages.”

Walmart, Amazon’s top competitor, has capped online purchases of Plan B to 10 units, though it’s unclear when the purchase limit began. The retailer doesn’t have in-store limits at this time, but managers may make changes to help ensure availabili­ty based on the demand.

“Many of our products have online purchase limits in place,” a Walmart spokespers­on said. “During times of fluctuatin­g demand, these limits may change.”

Meanwhile, CVS Health said it removed its own caps on emergency contracept­ives after it installed a temporary limit following Friday’s high court ruling. The company said it had been seeking to preserve access to the products following a “sharp increase” in sales, which have since returned to normal levels.

“We continue to have ample supply of emergency contracept­ives to meet customer needs,” CVS Health spokesman Matthew Blanchette said.

The pharmacy chain Walgreens is still able to meet demand for in-store purchases and curbside pickup of overthe-counter emergency contracept­ion pills. But spokeswoma­n Emily Mekstan said the company is restocking its ship-to-home business, which saw a jump in demand. CVS Health and Walgreens are the two biggest US drugstore chains. They run around 19,000 locations combined.

Spokespeop­le for Target and Kroger said they didn’t have anything to share on potential limits on contracept­ive purchases.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Rite Aid logo is displayed on its store, on Jan. 12, in Pittsburgh.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A Rite Aid logo is displayed on its store, on Jan. 12, in Pittsburgh.

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