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Shippensburg University Dispenses 'Morning-After' Pill From A Vending Machine

Morning After Pill

KEVIN BEGOS   02/ 7/12 08:58 PM ET  AP

Students at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania can get the "morning-after" pill by sliding $25 into a vending machine, an idea that has drawn the attention of federal regulators and raised questions about how accessible emergency contraception should be.

The student health center at Shippensburg, a secluded public institution of 8,300 students tucked between mountain ridges in the Cumberland Valley, provides the Plan B One Step emergency contraceptive in the vending machine along with condoms, decongestants and pregnancy tests.

"I think it's great that the school is giving us this option," junior Chelsea Wehking said Tuesday. "I've heard some kids say they'd be too embarrassed" to go into town – Shippensburg, permanent population about 6,000 – and buy Plan B.

Federal law makes the pill available without a prescription to anyone 17 or older, and the school checked records and found that all current students are that age or older, a spokesman said. It doesn't appear that any other vending machine in the U.S. dispenses the contraceptive, which can prevent pregnancy if taken soon after sexual intercourse.

The machine has been in place for about two years, and its existence wasn't widely known until recently. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is contacting state officials and the university to gather facts, agency spokeswoman Stephanie Yao said Tuesday.

The FDA's sudden interest took place amid a furor over religious rights and access to birth control. An official resigned from the nation's largest breast cancer charity Tuesday over Planned Parenthood funding, and Republican presidential candidates attacked the Obama administration for a recent ruling requiring church-affiliated employers to provide birth control.

Consumers have long been able to insert a few coins for the likes of aspirin, ibuprofen, antacids and other common over-the-counter remedies. But some experts see a worrisome trend in making drugs like Plan B, which is kept behind the pharmacy counter, available in a vending machine.

Alexandra Stern, a professor of the history of medicine at the University of Michigan, said she wasn't questioning a woman's right to have access to Plan B, but whether making it so easily available is a good idea.

"Perhaps it is personalized medicine taken too far," she said. "It's part of the general trend that drugs are available for consumers without interface with a pharmacist or doctors. This trend has serious pitfalls."

Taking Plan B within 72 hours of rape, condom failure or just forgetting regular contraception can cut the chances of pregnancy by up to 89 percent. It works best if taken within 24 hours. Some religious conservatives consider the emergency contraceptive tantamount to an abortion drug.

The idea for a vending machine started at Shippensburg after a survey about health center services several years ago. Eighty-five percent of the respondents supported making Plan B available, school spokesman Peter Gigliotti said. The student government endorsed the idea.

The machine is in the school's Etter Health Center, which only students and university employees can access, Gigliotti said in a statement. In addition, "no one can walk in off the street and go into the health center," he said; students must check in at a lobby desk before being allowed in.

Students and administrators at Shippensburg said they're puzzled that a single vending machine at a small school has attracted such attention. Senior Matthew Kanzler said a lot of students at the school weren't even aware of the machine until recently.

Most students do support the idea, he said – but not all.

"It's a way for students to get the help or care they need," he said, adding that students appreciate the on-campus health care because the school, about 130 miles from either Philadelphia or Pittsburgh, is so isolated.

In December, the Obama administration's top health official overruled her own drug regulators and stopped the Plan B pill from moving onto drugstore shelves next to condoms and other items. It remains available behind pharmacy counters.

Denise Bradley, a spokeswoman for Teva Pharmaceuticals, which makes Plan B, said in a statement that it sells the product only to "licensed pharmacies or other licensed healthcare clinics, which are required to follow federal guidelines for the distribution of pharmaceutical products."

On whether the machine might violate the law, "I don't have a definite yes or no," said Ron Ruman, a spokesman for the Pennsylvania Department of State, which oversees the state pharmacy board. If a person younger than 17 used the machine, it "potentially could be a violation," he said.

The drug isn't covered or subsidized by the school. Its price at the vending machine is set by the school's cost to the pharmaceutical company and is less than at off-campus pharmacies.

Deanne Hall, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy, noted that the ease of access to such a machine could be positive for many women, but she wondered whether self-treatment might deter sexual assault victims from seeking medical attention.

"This does open up a different door," she said.

Rob Maher, a professor at the Duquesne University School of Pharmacy in Pittsburgh, said he had never heard of a vending machine dispensing Plan B, but noted that there have been vending machines in doctor's offices, and even a specialized machine designed to fill prescriptions.

Still, he questioned whether the machine would make it possible for a young person to buy the drug without discussing their risk factors with a health care professional.

"That's the big risk with a vending machine like this," he said.

Carol Tobias, president of the anti-abortion group National Right to Life, said other services would be more appropriate.

"It would be a much more productive use of funds if universities would partner with local pregnancy resource centers where students can get real help if they need it," Tobias said.

Said Anna Franzonello, counsel to Americans United For Life: "Students at Shippensburg University deserve better than to have their administration represent the potent drug with life-ending potential as no more harmful than any other vending machine item."

___

Begos reported from Pittsburgh.

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02:45 PM on 02/12/2012
I don't see why not - and without the need for a pharmacy mark-up it's cheaper from the machine AND the school or taxpayers don't have to subsidize it. Hopefully the school is encouraging students to use the pill or some other kind of "plan A" first, but this is far better than people having abortions of having children out of wedlock and living off the taxpayers.
01:26 PM on 02/12/2012
Great, all the people complaining about were becoming a "welfare" state should be rejoicing that they are preventing unwanted babies
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MovieGuy2010
You can't fight in here..this is the war room!
01:09 AM on 02/12/2012
To Kitten and what ever trolls are posting here: Come on. you folks wet yourself about Freedom, Liberty and The Free Market?

This is just all 3 in action.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
04:15 AM on 02/11/2012
This situation will be very disturbing to people who believe pregnancy is punishment.
06:01 PM on 02/10/2012
Finally! A university with some sense.
03:46 AM on 02/10/2012
$25, Really?!! $10 would be more reasonable. Face it, college kids have sex, they should also have the technology to deal with their actions.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
10:15 AM on 02/10/2012
its 45 in pharmacies smart guy
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carmenalex
!Mamá caliente humanista!
11:39 PM on 02/11/2012
Honey, $25 is a steal. When hubby's condom broke it was $50 for Plan B at the pharmacy.
02:12 AM on 02/10/2012
A life is a life. If your mother had used the abortion pill, none of you would be here. This is just too casual and it is sickening. Also how many use it for later than 72 hrs? Like that woman in TX that used a bigger dose because she was 7 months and killed that baby? We hav no morals anymore...what a society we live in.
02:46 AM on 02/10/2012
This is not an abortion pill, it's an emergency contraceptive. If you go and look at the Plan B website, it is very clearly stated that "Plan B One-Step® is not RU-486 (the abortion pill)—it won’t work if you’re already pregnant, and it won’t affect an existing pregnancy."

Yes, people do messed up things like that woman, and that is most definitely wrong. And as for the part about 'If your mother had used the abortion pill, none of you would be here', that is also true for every sperm and egg that is not united. If the particular sperm and egg had not united at that particular moment in time, we would not be the people we are today, so who we are is all up to chance.
GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
05:27 AM on 02/10/2012
This is contraception. It prevents conception. It's not the "abortion pill". You may be thinking of RU-486, which DOES cause an abortion, and must be prescribed, and only after there is a positive pregnancy test. It acts before conception, therefore, no life is lost.
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maternatura
Conservative Liberal and recovering republican
01:01 AM on 02/10/2012
Wonderful idea. The schools administration is realistic.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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Daniella Lucia
11:54 PM on 02/09/2012
It's not like its the abortion pill in a box its for protecting yourself before you get pregnant. I like the idea of having in a collage setting where woman can get it discreetly and not be embarrassed going up to a counter at a pharmacy and asking for it.
02:15 AM on 02/10/2012
If you are too embarrassed to go ank for it , you're not mature enough to be doing what you did to have to ask for it.
04:35 AM on 02/10/2012
Seriously? Has it occured to you that some of these very mature college women are simply embarrassed about asking for the pill at a pharmacy because it is a revelation about their private sex life in a public setting? Your logic is twisted. I think it's very mature and classy to want to keep details of your sex life private.
GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
05:30 AM on 02/10/2012
Have you ever heard of the term RAPE? It happens. I can't believe you actually said what you did! No wonder you have no fans! You probably have no friends as well.
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blueagle8u
11:53 PM on 02/09/2012
GREAT IDEA! Let's move into the 21st Century shall we?
11:09 PM on 02/09/2012
I'm not sure why it's anyone else's business what adults with the right to their own bodies and decisions are doing. If you believe something, then practice it, but don't force your beliefs onto others just because you think your opinion is correct.
02:16 AM on 02/10/2012
yeah, don't force your belief on all those unborn babies who probably want to live and have a life.
02:42 AM on 02/10/2012
Yeah? Sorry, but an unborn baby has no consciousness and therefore no desires and can't want to live. And an unfertilized egg is not a baby, and Plan B is an 'emergency' CONTRACEPTION. Meaning that it prevents conception. So unless you think that an unfertilized egg is indeed a baby, this pill is in no way killing children or preventing their life. If you're totally against contraception as a whole, that is great for you, but I know that I will be using contraception and enjoying sex as every man and woman has the right to.

And also, if you think about it, every sperm and egg could be an 'unborn baby', so... every time you have a period or masturbate and ejaculate (I don't know if you're a man or woman, sorry), you are ruining a potential child's life 'who probably [wants] to live and have a life.'
GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
05:31 AM on 02/10/2012
This prevents conception. Therefore, there are no unborn babies.
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chainsawd1
I always seem to be where I am
10:58 PM on 02/09/2012
It is the right thing to do.

As a parent, we aren't going to stop them from having sex are we? So once we get past that, the next worst fear is that your daughter, who is in her 3rd year of college, (which you re-financed your hour house to get her there), gets pregnant and drops out of college.

So now you have a mile hile college bill to pay, you have a grandchild and your daughter living with you. She has no chance to go back to college and finish and get a degree with that 8 lb. bundle of joy in her arms.

I'd much rather plan B. She takes the pill, finishes college, gets a great job, makes good money and helps me pay back some of the $80,000.00 so I can retire at 72 instead of 82...

Enough said.
02:17 AM on 02/10/2012
how about just closing her legs instead of taking a life? Enough said!
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chainsawd1
I always seem to be where I am
02:45 AM on 02/10/2012
LOL, great idea but, how long has it been since you were in a college dorm Kitten?

Like I said in my post, we are not going to stop them from having sex.

So get real Kitten, If it were that easy, the plan B pill would never have been created,
02:50 AM on 02/10/2012
Or, she can use contraceptives and still enjoy sex. And if something goes wrong in that department, she can use an emergency contraceptive. Enough said!
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syl1969
10:54 PM on 02/09/2012
BRAVO to Shippensburg for allowing these women access to exercise their right to choose! As much as date rape seems to be prevalent in this day and age, nice to know they have this option if needed. It's about time - and nobody else's business!
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hman570
09:02 PM on 02/09/2012
What is the hub bub about. This is a great way to stop the many unwanted births in our country. Perhaps the Blacks would buy it and stop haveing babies by the dozens with differant fathers. Sell all you can sell. That way we don't have to pick up the tabs.