A Birth Control Pill Will Soon Be Available Without a Prescription. Here’s What to Know. Opill, also known as a “mini pill,” contains only progestin, a synthetic version of...
Jesse Wegman The Abortion Pill Stays Legal. But for How Long? June 13, 2024 Aspen Mays for The New York Times Share full article 228 By Jesse Wegman Mr....
A.’s approval of the pill. Share full article 1.3k A federal judge in Texas recently declared that the F.D.A.’s approval of an abortion pill, mifepristone, was invalid. Anna Moneymaker...
Abortion Ruling Supreme Court Ensures, for Now, Broad Access to Abortion Pill The order halts a sweeping ruling by a federal judge in Texas as an appeal moves forward in a case that could...
cases reach it on what critics call its shadow docket is an inexact science, as justices can dissent without saying so publicly. Kenny Holston/The New York Times By Adam Liptak April 22, 2023
Online abortion pill dispensaries are spending mere minutes with abortion clients with little to no follow-up, despite potential complications associated with the abortion pill, some even leading to death — according to virtual abortion pill organizations interviewed in Ms. Magazine’s “ online provider series.” · Under the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) REMS safety system, providers of the abortion pill must sign a prescriber agreement with manufacturer Danco Laboratories and generic manufacturer GenBioPro, which requires them ...
Because the pill works faster than other antidepressants and is taken for only two weeks, it... Kate Medley for The New York Times By Pam Belluck Pam Belluck has reported on postpartum...
The parties in the fight over access to the abortion pill sharply disagree on whether anti... Kaiti Sullivan for The New York Times By Abbie VanSickle and Pam Belluck Abbie VanSickle...
The pill mifepristone will be available with a prescription at pharmacy counters in a few states to start. Share full article 637 Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images By Pam Belluck March 1, 2024
Yasmin, Juliet, Diane, Brenda. The names are instantly recognisable to many women who take the contraceptive pill. ; It has been 55 years since the pill hit the Australian market and it remains the most popular method of contraception, despite a host of other longer-acting options becoming available in that time. ; If your brand of pill is a newer variety or happens to carry a woman's name, it is likely you are funding the cost of your prescription entirely out of your own pocket. ; But if these newer and more expensive contraceptives are simply out of your price range, the choice of cheaper pills available to you on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) is significantly narrower.