Tell a friend

Donate

Email sign-up

defending the First Amendment against the Christian right ...

Jews On First!

... because if Jews don't speak out, they'll think we don't mind

Area pharmacists speak out on Plan B

By Cynthia T. Pegram, The News and Advance, (Lynchburg, Virginia), August 27, 2006

By the end of the year, Plan B will be available for over-the-counter sales in many pharmacies across the nation.

In the Lynchburg area, local pharmacists will be making their own decisions about stocking the drug, which provides women with a second chance at preventing pregnancy if they missed the first chance.

The Food and Drug Administration last week said women 18 and older - and men purchasing for their partners - can buy Plan B from pharmacies without a doctor’s note.

"In the past we’ve had it on prescription," said Bill Wingfield, pharmacist and an owner of Tom Jones Drug in Lynchburg.

Wingfield said the drug will go behind the counter, just as products like Sudafed and codeine-containing cough syrups do now.

While Plan B cannot be sold to girls younger than 18 without a prescription, Wingfield does not think having to check customers for their age will be a problem.

In order to verify age, "we have to have a photo ID or a driver’s license," Wingfield said. "It won’t be any different from selling beer or cigarettes, as far as ID-ing people."

However, Wingfield said he didn’t think other measures for regulating cold medications - like the required signing of name and address in a record book for monitoring purposes - will apply, because of the privacy issue.

Wingfield said he is concerned that some patients may misuse the drug as a routine birth control method. And, he noted, it’s interesting that an over-the-counter Plan B can be purchased by men, giving an older male the option of buying it for an underage woman.

Roger Akers, pharmacist for Allied Community Pharmacy in Rustburg, said that he doesn’t see a high demand for Plan B.

"It’s been available on prescription and I’ve never had a call for it," said Akers. "I don’t think I’ll have much demand."

He hasn’t yet decided if he’ll stock it, but will study the issue. Akers said he’d have to decide if he believes it’s a morning-after pill, or a birth-control pill.

"If I do some research, and if I determine it’s just a morning-after pill, I won’t stock it," he said. "If it’s pretty much a birth- control pill, then I will."

Akers said he doesn’t think Plan B should be sold without a prescription.

"One of the really good things about women on birth control pills - they have to go to the doctor and get the checkups," said Akers. "They’re so important."

Those yearly checkups can detect an array of potential problems, ranging from cancer to thyroid disease, as well as giving women a chance to talk to the doctor about other issues, he said.

"With this Plan B, some of the women won’t go in for their checkups."

Michael Robertson, pharmacist with Robertson Drug Co. in Lynchburg, said that once the paperwork requirements are complete about the drug, "we probably will carry it, and will comply with the regulation as it comes out."

Having to verify age with purchase is "not too much more work," he said.

Rick Pack, pharmacist/owner of Appomattox Drug Store, said that Plan B "is not an item we currently stock."

"I do feel this is not a drug the general public should be able to use without the treatment of a doctor. I would worry about overuse."

Dr. Lewis Dabney, a Lynchburg specialist in obstetrics and gynecology, said that the drug is "Plan B, not Plan A."

The FDA says it’s safe for over-the-counter use, he said, and as an emergency contraceptive it is not a risk if a pregnancy already exists, said Dabney. Ideally, he said, a woman needs a negative pregnancy test before taking it

Although the drug has been available in the past, many women have not had access to it as a prescription drug in the time period they needed it, he said.

And it’s not for routine birth control.

"Plan B is not nearly as effective as being on birth control beforehand,"


Fair Use Statement: This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.