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Emergency
Contraception Does Not Reduce Unintended Pregnancy Rate
July
15, 2007
Science Daily — The "morning after pill" may be a good
option for individual women in crisis, but advance access to emergency
contraception is no antidote for the national problem of unintended
pregnancy. Contrary to the fears of critics, the presence of Plan B does not
provoke riskier sexual behavior.
According to a new review of studies, women who received an advance supply
of birth control pills for emergency contraception
had an equal chance of becoming pregnant as women who did not have early
access to the pills.
The review draws conclusions from eight studies of more than 6,000 women in
the United States, India and China.
Plan B is a well-known brand of emergency contraception pills, but many
different types of birth control medication taken at higher doses can
prevent pregnancy after sex. Treatment must begin within five days after
unprotected sex -- and sooner is better when it comes to EC.
"We had expected that easier access to emergency contraception could help
women use the pills more quickly when they needed them, and that in turn --
since EC is a time-relevant medication -- this could help women avoid
unintended pregnancy," said lead reviewer Chelsea Polis.
"Our review is really about the effectiveness of advance provision as a
strategy to reduce unintended pregnancy at a population level," Polis said.
"The review is not about the effectiveness of EC; that is a separate
matter."
The review appears in the current issue of The Cochrane Library, a
publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization
that evaluates research in all aspects of health care. Systematic reviews
draw evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering
both the content and quality of existing trials on a topic.
In 2001, about half of pregnancies in the United States were unintended,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Now, the United
States is working to lower the unintended pregnancy rate to 30 percent by
2010. Princeton University demographer James Trussell says easier access to
emergency contraception will not slow the rate of unintended pregnancy in
the United States.
"For individual women, it is definitely a last chance to prevent pregnancy
after unprotected sex. But it is not going to have a major population impact
because people will never use it enough," he said.
The review found that emergency contraception use was higher among women
given an advance supply of the birth control pills, but that increase in use
did not translate to a drop in the pregnancy rate.
"Even though advance provision increased use, we don't know if women were
using EC at the times when they were at risk for pregnancy, when it was
really needed," Polis explains.
"If women aren't going to use Plan B when they are given it for free in a
clinical trial and are counseled beforehand about using it every single time
they have unprotected sex, then having to go to CVS and having to pay $45
each time -- it isn't going to happen," Trussell said.
Nonetheless, Polis said her review is not an argument against easier access
to emergency contraception.
"Women deserve the chance to protect themselves from unintended pregnancy
and EC is a safe, effective way to do that. Emergencies like rape,
contraceptive failure and unprotected sex occur, and easier access to EC
eliminates a medically unwarranted barrier to taking emergency contraception
within the recommended timeframe," she said. "So steps like making EC
available over the counter are still incredibly important."
When advanced access to emergency contraception was first proposed, critics
worried that a medicine cabinet stocked with pills to prevent pregnancy
would lead some women to be more promiscuous, have riskier sex or not use
condoms.
The Cochrane review counters those concerns. "We found there was absolutely
no difference in sexually transmitted infection rates between the two
groups. There's absolutely no difference in terms of unprotected sex, condom
use or changes in use of other contraceptive methods," Polis said. "So it
appears that advance provision of EC has no harmful effects in terms of
risky sexual behaviors."
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