Houston Chronicle

Some pharmacies rationing contracept­ives

CVS, Rite Aid limit people to 3 pills per sale as demand rises

- By Fiona Rutherford and Allison Nicole Smith

CVS and Rite Aid pharmacies are limiting purchases of emergency contracept­ive pills as demand for the medication surged following the U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down the constituti­onal right to abortion.

CVS is temporaril­y limiting purchases to three pills per customer to ensure equitable access and consistent supply on store shelves, a spokespers­on said Monday. The pharmacy chain has ample supply of the emergency contracept­ives Plan B and Aftera, both online and in store, the spokespers­on said. Rite Aid is also limiting purchases of Plan B to three per customer due to increased demand, a spokespers­on for the company said.

The court’s decision allowing individual states to ban abortion stands to have a strong and long-lasting impact on many dimensions of health care. Insurers and clinicians are already planning for pregnant people to cross state lines to seek procedures, leaving employers, insurers and advocacy groups to grapple with the costs and logistics.

Many Walmart products have online purchase limits in place, a spokespers­on for the company said in an email, without specifying whether emergency contracept­ive pill purchases are limited. These limits may change during times of fluctuatin­g demand, the spokespers­on said.

Some chains haven’t put limits on the medication­s. Walgreens Boots Alliance hasn’t taken such steps, a spokespers­on said. News of the limits on purchases was reported earlier by the Wall Street Journal.

Kelso & Co. and Juggernaut Capital Partners, which bought Plan B One-Step from Teva Pharmaceut­ical Industries in 2017, didn’t respond to a request for comment. The two firms operate a company called Foundation Consumer Healthcare that manages the product.

Last week’s historic ruling is likely to make abortions largely illegal in half the country and further polarize a deeply divided nation. Twenty-six states either will or are likely to ban almost all abortions, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research organizati­on that backs abortion rights. Thirteen have so-called trigger laws designed to automatica­lly outlaw abortion when Roe was overturned.

Many people have already been preparing for what activists have described as a publicheal­th emergency. Last month, when a draft of the Supreme Court opinion was leaked, online searches surged for overthe-counter emergency contracept­ive medication, while increasing numbers made appointmen­ts to get intrauteri­ne devices that provide long-term birth control.

Before the Supreme Court’s ruling, Plan B was not in high demand on Amazon. It was roughly the 10,000th mostsearch­ed item, according to ecommerce industry researcher Marketplac­e Pulse, which analyzes data from Amazon. On June 24, the day of the abortionri­ghts decision, it ranked within the online retailer’s top 100 search results.

Amazon did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment.

 ?? Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press ?? CVS is temporaril­y restrictin­g the number of emergency contracept­ive pills people can purchase to ensure it will have a consistent supply in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling on abortion.
Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press CVS is temporaril­y restrictin­g the number of emergency contracept­ive pills people can purchase to ensure it will have a consistent supply in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling on abortion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States