Plan B or Plan C?
Susan
Wills
February 13, 2004
The Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) was expected to rule this month on whether the
morning after drug “Plan B” could be sold over-the-counter (OTC). On
February 13 the FDA instead announced it would postpone its decision for 90
days to review data relating to use by girls aged 16 and 17.
Meantime,
the propaganda machine rolls on. A breezy article in the Washington Post
stated that if any of the “virtual salad bar” of other contraceptive methods
fails, Plan B “erases the night before.” Aside from that snippet of wishful
thinking, the biggest whoppers in this blunder-filled article are these:
Plan B does not cause abortions, and selling it over-the-counter will not
put teens’ health at risk.
The
article claims that “conservatives” argued that the pill “was an abortive
tool,” but “scientists shot that premise down.” But scientists never “shot
down” the premise that Plan B can be abortifacient. Scientific literature
“lists eleven possible modes of action for emergency contraception, seven of
which can be abortifacient, that is, designed to prevent the implantation or
survival of the embryo” (USCCB Comments to the FDA,
www.usccb.org/ec-fda.htm).
The article
concedes that Plan B inhibits “implantation of a fertilized egg.” But how
deceptive to speak of a “fertilized egg” when it’s a week-old human embryo
who’s attempting to implant! Preventing implantation causes the embryo to
starve to death, a death that is just as final as that produced by an
abortion weeks later. There’s no confusion among scientists and doctors on
this. But manufacturers and promoters of IUDs and abortifacient drugs have
deliberately sown public confusion by claiming that “conception” (by
implication, life itself) occurs at implantation – so they can call their
products “contraceptives.” Many women who would consider using birth control
to prevent the onset of a new life, draw the line at killing a human life
that is already a week old. Plan B promoters mislead women by implying it’s
all the same.
Women
deserve to know the truth about Plan B. When some who’ve taken
“morning-after” pills later learned the truth, they’ve written in on-line
forums of “agonizing remorse” and “self-loathing,” of being “scared and
confused,” of “suffering from … post-abortion syndrome” due to the
possibility they may have taken a child’s life.
If Plan B is
put on drugstore shelves, teens will be free to purchase it. Is Plan B
proven safe for teens? No studies exist. What if it’s used repeatedly? Both
the manufacturer and the World Health Organization warn against routine use
– but how would one stop a young woman from dangerous repeated use if it’s
available on any pharmacy shelf? Levonorgestrel-based contraceptives like
Plan B carry proven risks of depression, weight gain, skin
rashes/discoloration, vision problems, breast pain, loss of sexual desire,
etc. Repeated use of high-dose ECs will expose teens to these risks, as well
as a significantly increased risk of a potentially life-threatening ectopic
pregnancy.
Teens
looking for Plan B are already risking exposure to STDs, many of which are
incurable. Some cause infertility, cancer, and even death. Over 15 million
new cases of STDs occur annually in the U.S., 3.8 million among teens. In
fact, studies show rising STD rates in regions where Plan B is available
OTC. Rather than encouraging promiscuity with the false promise of Plan B,
we must prompt more teens to try the morally sound and far safer “Plan C” of
chastity.
______________________________
Susan Wills is associate director for education, United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities.