Birth control pills should be available without a prescription, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says.(Photo: Photo Disc)
Birth control pills are so safe and important to women that they
should be sold on drugstore shelves, without a doctor's prescription,
says a group representing many of the doctors who prescribe them.
The
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) takes the
perhaps-surprising stance in an opinion released today and published in
the December issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
The
group says its aim is to reduce unintended pregnancies. And it says it
does not expect to lose patients if the switch ever occurs - something
that experts agree will not happen quickly.
"Oral contraceptives
are very safe, and data show women can make these decisions for
themselves," says Kavita Nanda, a physician with FHI 360 (formerly known
as Family Health International) in Durham, N.C., and a member of the
committee that wrote the opinion.
Many reproductive health
advocates are "pleasantly surprised and excited" that a major physicians
group is endorsing an idea some have been pushing for years, says
Kirsten Moore, president of the non-profit Reproductive Health
Technologies Project, Washington, D.C.
Some doctors have expressed
reservations about the idea in the past, citing concerns that women
might skip Pap smears and other care if they don't need to go to doctors
for reliable birth control. Others have expressed safety concerns.
"I
am mystified as to why ACOG would make a recommendation like this,
because birth control pills do have some significant side effects," says
Donna Harrison, a physician in Berrien Center, Mich., and director of
policy and research at the American Association of Pro-life
Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
The new opinion says birth control pills have some risks, but so do aspirin and acetaminophen, which are sold over the counter.
Pills that contain both estrogen and progestin, which are the most
popular kind, can raise the risk of blood clots and stroke. Yet those
risks are much higher for women who get pregnant, Nanda says. And
studies show women can use self-administered questionnaires about their
health and habits to determine if the pills are safe enough for them,
she says. The checklists could be on labels or on posters or computer
screens at drugstores.
The committee also considered the risk
that women getting pills over the counter might stop coming to doctors
for other care. Studies suggest that won't happen, the group says. In
one study, U.S. women who went to Mexico to buy birth control pills
without prescriptions were nearly as likely as those who got
prescriptions to stay up to date with Pap smears, breast exams and
screening for sexually transmitted diseases.
Still, the doctors'
group and other advocates say they are concerned about whether insurers
will pay for non-prescription pills. The Affordable Care Act says
insurers must pay for methods approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), but it's not yet clear if nonprescription methods
are covered, Moore says.
For now, the idea an over-the-counter
birth control pill in the USA is just that: A change would require a
drug company to ask for and receive FDA approval. Daniel Grossman, a San
Francisco physician who is a leading advocate for over-the-counter
birth control, says he knows of no pharmaceutical company even starting
the studies that would be required for FDA review.
Grossman, vice
president for research at Ibis Reproductive Health, does say the new
support from doctors could encourage companies to try. He says it's
likely that the first pills considered would be so-called "mini-pills"
that use progestin but not estrogen and are safe for larger groups of
women.
History suggests the road to approval could be rocky:
Emergency contraceptive pills - Plan B "morning after" pills - are sold
to women older than 17 without a prescription, but from behind pharmacy
counters. An FDA decision to move those pills to shelves, where younger
teens could buy them without prescriptions, was overruled by the Obama
administration a year ago.
The FDA did recently hold a hearing to
air opinions about moving a variety of prescription medications to
non-prescription status. Proponents of over-the-counter birth control
pills spoke at that hearing.
And so did the American Medical
Association, which expressed concerns about the general idea of patients
taking medications for chronic conditions such as high blood pressure,
asthma and migraine without prescriptions or a doctor's oversight. The
AMA had no comment Tuesday on the birth control pill opinion from the
other physicians' group.
USA Today