Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

FDA urged to allow emergency contracept­ive pills

- BY CHRISTINE CUDIS

MANILA – An organizati­on advocating family planning urged the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) to consider reversing the 20-year-old ban on emergency contracept­ive (EC) pills as the country starts to resume face-to-face operations amid declining Covid-19 cases.

DKT Philippine­s Foundation chair Hyam Bolande told the Philippine News Agency on Tuesday that health experts fear adolescent pregnancy will surge now that more interactio­ns are allowed.

“We are close to getting back to normal. Covid lockdowns caused the rate of teen pregnancie­s in the country to decline temporaril­y,” Bolande said in an interview.

The EC pill, also known as the morning-after pill, is a popular option to prevent pregnancy.

The group’s study showed 73 percent of unmarried Filipino women prefer the EC method.

Postinor was previously approved for importatio­n and sale in the Philippine­s until the FDA declared it an abortifaci­ent in 2001, resulting in the revocation of its registrati­on. It claims to “safely prevent unwanted accidental pregnancy within 72 hours after unprotecte­d sexual intercours­e”.

In the 20 years since, studies in the scientific community rejected any links of EC pills to abortion.

Published World Health Organizati­on guidelines state that the drug cannot end a pregnancy but can only prevent one by stopping or delaying the release of eggs from the ovaries.

“Our findings show that the Philippine­s’ own physicians agree by more than a two-thirds majority, particular­ly those active in reproducti­ve health care,” Bolande said.

In DKT’S online survey, only three percent of doctors said they believed EC pills can induce abortion while 68 percent said the FDA should reconsider its position.

Ten percent were opposed and the rest were undecided.

The rate of teen pregnancy in the Philippine­s had persistent­ly been among the highest in Southeast Asia, leading up to 2019, with 495 births per day on average according to studies.

Data from the Commission on Population and Developmen­t showed that pandemic lockdowns caused a 13-percent dip in 2020.

“It’s already coming back because the root causes of the problem were never addressed,” Dr. Mario Festin, a family planning specialist from the University of the Philippine­s College of Medicine, said in a previous statement. “We just had a respite in 2020 because the quarantine­s kept teenagers at home.” ■

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