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Where's the opposition to OTC birth control?

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Tue, May 16, 2023 07:02 PM

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Also: Two miles and a 23-year life expectancy gap May 16, 2023 Hi CommonHealth reader,

Also: Two miles and a 23-year life expectancy gap [View in browser](    [❤️]( May 16, 2023 Hi CommonHealth reader, At a time when reproductive health can feel increasingly politicized and polarized in American society, a landmark change may be around the corner without a big, flashy debate: over-the-counter birth control pills. Last week, one of the Food and Drug Administration’s advisory committees [voted unanimously]( support making the drug available over-the-counter, switching away from prescription-only status. It’s taken "Free the Pill" advocates nearly two decades to get here. And many of them did not expect the FDA to consider this change against the backdrop of an intense abortion debate. “There are so many hostile attacks on sexual reproductive health care. So, as an advocate, it's surprising when we might actually be very close to a win,” Candace Gibson, of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Justice, told me. I found myself fascinated by why there is not more organized opposition. So, I started asking around. It turns out that both Republicans and Democrats have come out in favor of making the pill available without a prescription. When I reached out to March for Life, an anti-abortion organization, I got a short email saying the group “doesn't take a position on birth control.” Same with the conservative Massachusetts Family Institute. Then I spoke to Elizabeth Janiak, a researcher at Harvard’s School of Public Health, who has been tracking the issue. She assured me that many people involved in grassroots organizing against abortion also oppose contraception — and they often oppose it “just as fervently.” But “they have not chosen to make their opposition to contraception a major political goal,” she quickly added. She had a few explanations for why. She said some conservatives — who oppose the Affordable Care Act requirement that insurance companies cover the cost of certain preventative health services — think of over-the-counter birth control as a “free market” alternative. It is seen as evidence that not all people need health insurance since there are other ways to access [preventive care](. Another explanation for the lack of opposition, Janiak said, is that the pill is just too common — it’s taken daily by millions in the U.S. “Because it's so widely used and because it has been used for so long, pretty much everyone either has used the pill or knows someone who has. And so we can all say from our own personal experience, ‘Yeah, this drug seems perfectly safe,’ ” Janiak said. Of course, there’s the religious perspective to consider, too. The Catholic Church is opposed to hormonal contraception and has been the main opposition to taking the pill over-the-counter. But evangelical groups that have been a driving force in efforts to ban abortion often don’t oppose contraception. I spoke with some evangelical activists who said the pill is widely used within their circles. Some of them said the community is slowly waking up to “moral problems with the pill,” but — currently — there is no large-scale opposition. This lack of consensus within conservative religious groups, some observers surmise, is keeping many grassroots organizations from taking a strong stance on the topic. (As I mentioned in [a newsletter last summer]( evangelical groups have said there should be an age restriction if the pill becomes available without a prescription.) Even if the politics of the pill and abortion are very different, Janiak warned that nothing is happening in a silo. She said where things land in the legal battle over the abortion medication [mifepristone]( and what the case signals about whether judges can overrule FDA decisions — could make a difference for potential future legal challenges to an FDA decision on the pill. But first, the FDA has to make the switch official. That decision is expected this summer. Gabrielle Emanuel Health reporter [Follow]( Support the news  This Week's Must Reads [Life-saving or stigmatizing? Parents wrestle with obesity treatment options for kids]( New weight-loss medications and bariatric surgery have the potential to spare children health and social problems. But some parents think they're sending kids the wrong message about their bodies. [Read more.]( [Life-saving or stigmatizing? Parents wrestle with obesity treatment options for kids]( New weight-loss medications and bariatric surgery have the potential to spare children health and social problems. But some parents think they're sending kids the wrong message about their bodies. [Read more.]( [Back Bay to Nubian Square: 2 miles and a 23-year life expectancy gap]( A startling analysis from the Boston Public Health Commission shows the longest average life expectancy in Boston is nearly 92 years, for residents in a section of the Back Bay. Residents in a section of Roxbury have the shortest expected life span, just under 69 years. [Read more.]( [Back Bay to Nubian Square: 2 miles and a 23-year life expectancy gap]( A startling analysis from the Boston Public Health Commission shows the longest average life expectancy in Boston is nearly 92 years, for residents in a section of the Back Bay. Residents in a section of Roxbury have the shortest expected life span, just under 69 years. [Read more.]( [He helped cancer patients find peace through psychedelics. Then came his diagnosis]( Roland Griffiths is known as the scientist who helped prove that psychedelics can alleviate depression and mental anguish in cancer patients. That pursuit has since become a lot more personal. [Read more.]( [He helped cancer patients find peace through psychedelics. Then came his diagnosis]( Roland Griffiths is known as the scientist who helped prove that psychedelics can alleviate depression and mental anguish in cancer patients. That pursuit has since become a lot more personal. [Read more.]( [Families scramble to find growth hormone drug as shortage drags on]( Children who need growth hormone to achieve their full stature are having trouble getting the medicine. A shortage has stretched months longer than expected and could last the rest of the year. [Read more.]( [Families scramble to find growth hormone drug as shortage drags on]( Children who need growth hormone to achieve their full stature are having trouble getting the medicine. A shortage has stretched months longer than expected and could last the rest of the year. [Read more.]( [Mass. high court awards $37 million in cancer suit against tobacco maker Philip Morris]( The state's Supreme Judicial Court said the evidence and expert witness testimony supported a Newton woman who sued Philip Morris USA after she developed cancer from smoking. [Read more.]( [Mass. high court awards $37 million in cancer suit against tobacco maker Philip Morris]( The state's Supreme Judicial Court said the evidence and expert witness testimony supported a Newton woman who sued Philip Morris USA after she developed cancer from smoking. [Read more.]( What We're Reading 📚 - As More Hospitals Create Police Forces, Critics Warn of Pitfalls ([KFF Health News]( - Football bonded them. Its violence tore them apart ([Washington Post]( - Vending machines are the latest tool for fighting opioid overdoses ([Associated Press]( "We have people dying before they should. We should all care about this." — Dr. Bisola Ojikutu, Boston’s Public Health Commissioner, on the [life expectancy gap]( in two local areas. ICYMI [Gas vs. electric stoves: Breaking down some burning health and environment questions]( Some Americans are considering buying electric or induction stoves as concerns grow about how gas stoves may affect our health and planet. Here are answers to some burning questions. [Read more.]( [Gas vs. electric stoves: Breaking down some burning health and environment questions]( Some Americans are considering buying electric or induction stoves as concerns grow about how gas stoves may affect our health and planet. Here are answers to some burning questions. [Read more.]( 🧠💥 Did you know...💥🧠 ...a Dutch man was banned from donating any more sperm? According to [Reuters]( he has fathered between 500 and 600 children, and there is concern about the potential for inbreeding and incest. 😎 Forward to a friend. They can sign up [here](. 📣 Give us your feedback: newsletters@wbur.org 📧 Get more WBUR stories sent to your inbox. [Check out all of our newsletter offerings.]( Support the news     Want to change how you receive these emails? Stop getting this newsletter by [updating your preferences.](  I don't want to hear from WBUR anymore. Unsubscribe from all WBUR editorial newsletters [here.](  Interested in learning more about corporate sponsorship? [Click here.]( Copyright © 2022 WBUR-FM, All rights reserved.

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