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niyad

(120,281 posts)
Sat Apr 8, 2023, 01:41 PM Apr 2023

Young People Don't Know Their Emergency Contraception Options


Young People Don’t Know Their Emergency Contraception Options
4/6/2023 by Cynthia Harper
Emergency contraception—the ‘last chance’ contraceptive method—is even more important in a post-Roe world, but most young people do not know their options.



Back to school season at New York University (NYU) on Aug. 29, 2021. (Alexi Rosenfeld / Getty Images)

Access to contraception has been uneven across the U.S. for a long time, and not always affordable—especially for young people. Now that the Supreme Court has overturned the right to abortion, and state legislators and anti-abortion activists have increased their efforts to block any avenue to abortion care, it’s even more urgent that people who want to prevent pregnancy understand all their options and have access to the birth control method that is right for them. That includes knowing about all the types of emergency contraception. Emergency contraception methods are ones people can use after they’ve had sex and are concerned with becoming pregnant. They work by preventing or delaying the release of an egg from the ovary to prevent pregnancy after the fact.



My research team at Beyond the Pill sat down with community college students to find out what they know about emergency contraception. We included a wide range of people, from adolescents and young adults, LGBTQ and heterosexual students, immigrants and U.S. born, and many racial and ethnic backgrounds. Most had some idea about emergency contraception pills in general. A lot of people had heard about Plan B, which is available over the counter, best if taken within three days. More than half had never heard of another pill called ella—an emergency contraception that’s slightly more effective and works up to five days, though you need a prescription.
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young-people-emergency-contraception-plan-b-college(Courtesy of Beyond the Pill)

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With young people facing increasing constraints on their reproductive health, they need to be aware of emergency contraceptive methods, where to get them and how to use them. However, the vast majority of providers aren’t counseling young people about emergency contraception. It’s key for healthcare providers to inform their patients about emergency contraception, and to offer a supply in advance to have at home.



A Plan B vending machine in the student union building at Boston University on July 26, 2022. Each carton contains a single pill and cost $7.25 and is available at all times to students. (Joseph Prezioso / AFP via Getty Images)

We also need better insurance coverage for prescription options, training for providers on providing EC ahead of time so people have it when they need it, and availability in emergency departments. Education for young people outside of clinic settings is an essential piece. Young people deserve the knowledge to make the best decisions for themselves about their reproductive health.


https://msmagazine.com/2023/04/06/young-people-emergency-contraception-plan-b-college/
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Young People Don't Know Their Emergency Contraception Options (Original Post) niyad Apr 2023 OP
for them a fertilized egg trumps girls/women's lives Stargleamer Apr 2023 #1
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