Los Angeles Times

Easier access to birth control

New Oregon laws make contracept­ives available without a prescripti­on and in yearlong supplies.

- By Natalie Schachar natalie. schachar @ latimes. com

Oregonians will be able to buy birth control at a pharmacy without a doctor’s prescripti­on beginning next year, potentiall­y making the state the first in the nation to allow the practice.

The bill was overwhelmi­ngly approved in the state House and Senate and was signed by Gov. Kate Brown last week. It will go into effect at the start of next year.

“It makes no sense that men should have unrestrict­ed access to contracept­ives, while women must first get a prescripti­on from their physician,” said Republican state Rep. Knute Buehler, an orthopedic surgeon who introduced the bill. “Birth control should be as easy and accessible as possible.”

California passed a similar law in 2013, but its imple- mentation has been delayed as medical boards wrangle over rules allowing pharmacist­s to prescribe medication.

In Oregon, the state Health Authority, Board of Nursing and Board of Pharmacy have met to discuss regulation­s and training to allow pharmacist­s to prescribe birth control. They already can prescribe smoking cessation drugs and travel pills.

In the U. S. Senate, Cory Gardner ( R- Colo.) and Patty Murray ( D- Wash.) have introduced measures that would allow women to buy birth control pills approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion over the counter.

The measures would make it easier for women to obtain birth control because the pills wouldn’t require a pharmacy prescripti­on. The two federal bills are pending.

According to the Oregon law, women will now be eligible to buy birth control regardless of whether they have previously received a prescripti­on from a primary care practition­er. Teenagers will be able to obtain hor- monal or oral contracept­ion with a previous prescripti­on from a doctor.

A second Oregon law, which passed the Legislatur­e in a near- unanimous vote Thursday, allows women to obtain a yearlong supply of birth control instead of refilling their prescripti­on every 30 or 90 days.

Mary Nolan, executive director of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Oregon, applauded the state measures, saying they made it less likely that a woman would pick up doses late or forgo getting a prescripti­on.

“We know that allowing women to get a yearlong prescripti­on improves its effectiven­ess,” Nolan said.

“If you can imagine a woman who lives 30 or 40 minutes away from a pharmacy, having to make two separate trips could be a burden on her, but it doesn’t even need to be a woman in a remote or rural part of the state,” Nolan said. “A woman in an area that’s not wellserved could have the same kind of problems.”

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