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  September 24, 2006VOL. 44, NO. 15Oakland, CA

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Histories
St. Mary-St. Francis de Sales Parish
St. Andrew-St. Joseph Parish

St. Mary’s Center to relocate to church site

Soup kitchen closes after serving meals
for 30 years

USCCB education secretary named chancellor for Oakland Diocese

Anne Rynders named Catholic Woman of the Year

Guatemalan village gets clean water with help from Fremont parish

Migrants risk lives, hope in desert crossing

CCEB issues Katrina assistance report

Catholic agencies
continues to serve hurricane survivors

U.S. bishops’ pro-life official urges
pharmacists not to support Plan B

Activists urge no students for U.S. military school

COMMENTARY
A Labor Day reflection on immigration and work

OBITUARY
Father Vincent Foerstler, O.P.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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U.S. bishops’ pro-life official urges
pharmacists not to support Plan B

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- The Food and Drug Administration’s Aug. 24 decision, with the apparent support of President George W. Bush, to allow over-the-counter sales of Plan B, the “morning-after pill,” to women 18 and older defies common sense and is “completely unacceptable,” according to a pro-life official of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Deirdre McQuade, director of planning and information for the bishops’ Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities, urged pharmacists “not to confuse FDA approval with a right to access” and said they should “refuse to stock this potent drug for distribution on demand.”

Plan B uses large doses of birth-control pills to prevent conception up to 72 hours after unprotected sex. Over-the-counter sales of the drug were expected to begin before the end of the year.

In its Aug. 24 announcement the FDA said that, “when used as directed, Plan B effectively and safely prevents pregnancy.” But McQuade said that ignores the “potentially abortifacient” effects of the drug.

“While Plan B can prevent fertilization, the manufacturer admits it may also prevent a newly conceived embryo from implanting and surviving in the womb,” she said. “This is properly understood as causing an early abortion.

“Without the benefit of a doctor’s supervision, many women will be unaware of this abortifacient action and the other risks posed by Plan B,” McQuade added.

The FDA said the drug would be made available “with a rigorous labeling, packaging, education, distribution and monitoring program” called Convenient Access, Responsible Education, or CARE.

McQuade said Plan B “is a powerful dose of the artificial hormone levonorgestrel -- 40 times the amount found in comparable prescription-only birth-control pills.”

“Making the more potent dosage available to women upon request simply offends common sense, especially when the drug is not designed to treat a disease or pathological condition,” she said.

In an Aug. 21 press conference, Bush said he supported whatever decision is made about Plan B by Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach, acting FDA commissioner, but added he believes the drug “ought to require a prescription for minors.”

After the FDA decision was announced Aug. 24, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said the president “appreciates that the FDA did an exhaustive review, that they recognize the critical distinction between minors and adults and the risks a drug like this can pose.”

“The FDA made clear that it will insist on stringent conditions and restrictions on access to reduce both health risks and opportunities for abuse, especially to protect minors,” Perino added. “I’m sure the FDA will follow through on that and make sure these important conditions are established and enforced.”

The FDA announced July 31 that it would work with Duramed, a subsidiary of Barr Pharmaceuticals that manufactures the drug marketed as Plan B, to develop a “framework for moving emergency contraception medication to over-the-counter status” for women 18 and older.

Barr Pharmaceuticals originally had sought approval for over-the-counter sales of Plan B to anyone 16 or over. Then-FDA Commissioner Lester M. Crawford announced in August 2005 that the agency would not grant such approval and set a 60-day period for comment. Crawford resigned his post that October.

Von Eschenbach said in a July 31 letter to Duramed that the agency had received approximately 47,000 comments, and “we concur with the overwhelming majority of the comments ... that it is not necessary to engage in rule-making to resolve the novel regulatory issues raised by your application.”

 

 


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