Advocacy

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PRCH Helps Physicians Change Policy

PRCH provides opportunities for physicians to get involved in local, state, and federal public policy issues. PRCH physicians are the best messengers to provide medically accurate information on reproductive health issues to lawmakers and the public. With PRCH, your voice can be heard!

PRCH supports policies that promote reproductive healthcare for all, including increased access to birth control, emergency contraception, and abortion services, as well as comprehensive sex education. PRCH opposes policies that place politics over science at the expense of the reproductive healthcare of women, men, and teens.

Tell Obama to Follow Medicine on Plan B!

December 19, 2011

On December 7, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was poised to change the status of the emergency contraceptive Plan B One-Step®, allowing it to be sold without prescription and without age restrictions. But Secretary Kathleen Sebelius of Health and Human Services stopped the FDA from taking this critical step for women's health, and President Barack Obama stands by her decision.

Email President Obama right now. Urge him to remove the age restriction from Plan B for science, medicine, and Americans' health.

Atsuko Koyama, MD, MPHAdolescent Reproductive and Sexual Health Education Project faculty member Atsuko Koyama, MD, MPH, was interviewed for NPR's Morning Edition. Dr. Koyama, who is also a former Leadership Training Academy Fellow and current PRCH board member, said that keeping Plan B behind a pharmacy counter is a barrier regardless of age: "[H]aving to go in, show your ID, talk to someone you've never met before, and say 'I need Plan B' can be embarrassing." Her remarks were quoted on White Coat Notes, the Boston Globe's medical news blog.

Dr. Koyama also published a letter to the editor in the Globe: "Every woman, whether she is 16 or 36, should be able to buy Plan B as soon as possible after having unprotected sex, as the medication becomes less effective the longer one waits."

In the Los Angeles Times, Melanie Gold, DO, of the Adolescent Reproductive and Sexual Health Education Project, told a reporter "And because of [the age restriction], the drug's behind the counter for everyone. It's not just bad for kids under 17, it's bad for everybody."

In a letter to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Leadership Training Academy Fellow Sara Pentlicky, MD, emphasized Plan B's safety: "In fact, there is not a single woman or teen I have ever seen who could not take Plan B, unless of course she couldn't get it."

Nancy Stanwood, MD, MPHPRCH board member Nancy Stanwood, MD, MPH, told Bloomberg.com about teens' need for improved access to Plan B. The article also appeared on the Washington Post's website.

On WebMD.com, Dr. Stanwood explained why the Obama administration's decision is also a setback for survivors of sexual assault. "Many women who have been raped do not come in for medical care." Over-the-counter access to Plan B, as opposed to asking a pharmacist for the medication only during pharmacy hours, would be a significant improvement in rape survivors' access to emergency contraception.

Former PRCH board member Paula Hillard, MD, told ABC News' website: "The original FDA Advisory committee that recommended approval for Plan B was virtually unanimous in its recommendation, and didn't find reason to draw a line at 18 or 17 or any age. Sebelius and Obama should be ashamed."

Lisa Perriera, MDIn this video on the ABC News website (scroll down to the first video on the left side), Adolescent Reproductive and Sexual Health Education Project faculty member and former Leadership Training Initiative Fellow Lisa Perriera, MD, MPH, describes the logistical difficulties teens face when in need of emergency contraception.

In a letter to the Kansas City Star, Adolescent Reproductive and Sexual Health Education Project faculty member Daryl Lynch, MD, wrote that adolescents need convenient access to Plan B, in part because "Many teens lack optimal parental support and guidance."

Christopher Estes, MD, MPHFormer Leadership Training Initiative Fellow Christopher Estes, MD, MPH, called the Obama administration's cancellation of over-the-counter status for Plan B a "political move that’s trumping actual evidence based medicine" in an interview with MyHealthNewsDaily.com.

In a letter to the Chicago Tribune, Leadership Training Academy Fellow Lori Gawron, MD, declared, "[W]e should be doing everything in our power to provide safe and effective ways to decrease unintended pregnancy—including empowering our teens with Plan B as an option."

In PRCH's press statement, board chair Douglas Laube, MD, MEd, condemned Secretary Sebelius's cancellation of over-the-counter status for Plan B:

“For more than a decade, Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health—with the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists—has supported access to Plan B without a prescription for women throughout their reproductive years."

Dr. Laube continued, "We all know, based on voluminous evidence that continues to accumulate, that Plan B is safe for all teens’ use without going through a physician and a pharmacist. ... [Secretary Sebelius's action] is outrageous."

Email Senate to Protect Servicewomen’s Health

November 22, 2011

Women in the military don’t have insurance coverage for abortion in cases of rape. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) has introduced an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that would add rape and incest to life endangerment as the exceptions to the military’s ban on insurance coverage for abortion.

Our women in uniform dedicate their lives to protecting our country—it's time for the law to protect them. Email your senators to urge support for Senator Shaheen’s amendment and compassionate care for servicewomen who have survived rape.

Call President Obama Now!

November 17, 2011

The president is under tremendous pressure to let more religious institutions refuse to give their employees insurance coverage for birth control.

Let him know that every woman deserves access to affordable contraception, no matter where she works—her health depends on it. Call President Obama right now.

Mississippi: Vote No on Amendment to Criminalize Abortion

November 8, 2011

In this press statement, PRCH board chair and obstetrician/gynecologist Douglas Laube, MD, MEd, denounces the "personhood" amendment on today's ballot in Mississippi: "[U]nder Amendment 26 ... I would be hard-pressed to help many of my patients."

The amendment would give legal rights to fertilized eggs, turn abortion into a criminal act under all circumstances, and jeopardize the legality of the birth control pill, the IUD, and some in-vitro fertilization techniques.

Dr. Laube urges Mississippi to vote no on the amendment. "Personhood for fertilized eggs is not worth the risk” to women's health and lives. His full statement appears on the Florida Independent and the Washington Independent.

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