Kuwait Times

Feds fight morning-after pill age ruling in NY

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NEW YORK: Department of Justice lawyers filed court papers again asking a federal appeals court to delay lifting age restrictio­ns and prescripti­on requiremen­ts on an emergency contracept­ive popularly known as the morning-after pill.

The papers seek to delay implementa­tion of a judge’s April 5 ruling lifting restrictio­ns on the drugs, including the medication­s sold under the brand name Plan B, setting the stage for another court showdown between President Barack Obama’s administra­tion and women’s health activists over access to the contracept­ive.

Currently, only people age 17 or older can buy the contracept­ive without a prescripti­on, although the Food and Drug Administra­tion announced in late April that it would begin allowing one newer version of the drug, Plan B One-Step, to be sold over the counter to people as young as 15 as long as they present photo ID.

That accommodat­ion only further agitated US District Court Judge Edward Korman, who in his opinion on April 5 said that U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius had wrongly let politics trump science when she overruled an FDA decision in 2011 that emergency contracept­ion based on the hormone levonorges­trel could be sold safely to people of all ages without a prescripti­on.

In a follow-up ruling, the judge said that the contracept­ive “would be among the safest drugs available to children and adults on any drugstore shelf.” He called the FDA’s deal to allow some over-the-counter sales of Plan B One-Step a “sweetheart agreement” for the medication’s manufactur­er, Teva Pharmaceut­icals.

He noted that it would continue to restrict access to cheaper brands of the drug and be a hardship to the many young people who don’t have driver’s licenses. The 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, in New York, is scheduled to begin considerin­g on Tuesday whether to allow the judge’s ruling to take effect immediatel­y or delay it while further appeals are pending.

The Department of Justice, in its motion for a stay, argued that the judge oversteppe­d his authority in ordering the drugs to be made available. It also said that maintainin­g the status quo while the case is on appeal would prevent market confusion over the status of the drugs.

Lawyers for a group of women and parents who have sued to broaden access to the contracept­ives said in court papers that any further delay in their availabili­ty would harm “countless” women by leaving obstructio­ns in place.

While the case is ostensibly about rules limiting the access of teenagers to the drug, it has a practical impact on older women as well because the age restrictio­ns mean that the contracept­ives must be kept behind locked pharmacy counters and therefore aren’t always available in the emergencie­s for which they are intended.

The drugs can prevent pregnancy if taken within 72 hours of sex, but they are more effective the sooner they are taken. —AP

 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: An HIV blood test is administer­ed in a mobile testing facility outside the Benning Stoddert Recreation Center in Washington. AIDS Healthcare Foundation Staff and volunteers handed out free condoms and provided a free HIV test as a part of...
WASHINGTON: An HIV blood test is administer­ed in a mobile testing facility outside the Benning Stoddert Recreation Center in Washington. AIDS Healthcare Foundation Staff and volunteers handed out free condoms and provided a free HIV test as a part of...

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