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Plan BTM
is a registered trademark of Women's Capital Corporation, a subsidiary
of Duramed Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
This site is a reporting site and has no affiliation with the manufacturer.
BirthControl.
Plan B - Emergency
Contraception (Birth Control)
WASHINGTON - By the end of the year,
U.S. women will be able to walk into any pharmacy and buy emergency
contraceptive pills without a prescription as a result of a Food and
Drug Administration decision on Thursday, August 24.
The decision means women will not have to go to a doctor as long as they
prove they are 18 or older to a pharmacist, who will keep the drugs
behind a counter. Younger teens still will need a prescription, and the
pills will not be sold at gas stations, convenience stores or other
outlets that do not have pharmacists.
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The approval marks the first time a hormonal contraceptive will be
available in the United States without a prescription. The pills, which
will be sold as Plan B, will probably cost about $25 to $40 per
dose, and men also will be able to buy them.
The Plan B package instructions state
that you should take 1 white pill within 120 hours after unprotected sex
and 1 more white pill 12 hours later. Each dose contains 0.75 mg of
levonorgestrel. |
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However, recent research
indicates that both doses can be taken at the same time: take 2 Plan B
pills as soon as possible after unprotected intercourse. The
user should be instructed that if she vomits within one hour of taking
either dose of medication she should contact her health care
professional to discuss whether to repeat that dose.
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Emergency contraception
(EC) (also known as Emergency Birth Control (EBC)the morning-after pill,
or postcoital contraception)
refers to measures, that if taken after
sex, may prevent a pregnancy.
Forms of EC include:
- Emergency contraceptive pill
-referred to simply as "emergency contraception," "ECPs," or "ECs", or
"morning-after pill" -are hormones that act both to prevent ovulation
or fertilisation, or possibly, post-fertilisation, subsequent
implantation of a blastocyst (embryo). ECPs are not to be confused
with chemical abortion methods that act after implantation has
occurred.
- Intrauterine devices (IUDs) -
usually used as a primary contraception method, but sometimes used as
emergency contraception.
As opposed to regular methods of
contraception, ECs are considered for use in occasional cases only, for
example in the event of contraceptive failure. Since they act
before implantation, they are considered medically and legally to be
forms of contraception. However, some who are pro-life define pregnancy
as beginning with fertilization, so they consider EC to be an
abortifacient.
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Source: Press Releases - Wikipedia, FTC and
other public domain sources and product web sites. We have no
affiliation with any of them.
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