Back Up Your Birth Control Day: March 25, 2008
Tuesday, March 25, 2008, marks the seventh annual Back Up Your Birth Control Day, a
national day of activism to raise awareness about emergency contraception (EC,
also known as “the morning-after pill”). EC is a safe and effective way to
prevent pregnancy after unprotected intercourse, including contraceptive failure
or rape. Despite recent actions increasing access to EC, barriers remain.
What You Can Do to Participate in Back Up Your Birth Control Day
If you would like to get involved with Back Up Your Birth Control Day just
follow these simple steps:
1. Find out where your state stands when it comes to EC.
2. Send the ACLU’s action alert supporting the Prevention First Act,
which calls for increased access to and awareness of EC, to your member of
Congress.
3. Visit the Back Up Your Birth Control Web site to get more ideas on
how you can get involved.
The Status of Emergency Contraception
Several states (Alaska, California, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Mexico, Vermont, and Washington) have a law or regulation that
permits participating pharmacists to prescribe EC. In those states, women
of all ages (including those who do not have government-issued proof of age) can
obtain the medication directly from a pharmacist without a physician’s
prescription.
The federal government refuses to ensure access to EC for rape
survivors and women in the military. The Department of Justice has
repeatedly ignored efforts by reproductive rights and sexual assault victims’
advocates to include information about EC in the national protocol for treating
sexual assault survivors. A woman who has just survived a sexual assault
is already in crisis. She should not have to face the added burden of possibly
becoming pregnant as a result of rape. Likewise, in 2002, the Department
of Defense removed EC from its Basic Core Formulary, making it much less likely
that the drug will be stocked on military bases. At a time when we are
expecting so much from our women service members, we should be doing everything
possible to meet their basic health care needs.
EC continues to make headlines across the country about pharmacists or
pharmacies refusing to fill valid requests for EC. In response to reports
of women facing refusals, many states have considered ways to address the
problem. Consistent with the ACLU’s commitment to reproductive freedom and
religious liberty, a law or regulation should require pharmacies to ensure that
any lawful and appropriate request to purchase birth control is satisfied
on-site without added delay. Imposing a mandate on pharmacies, and not
individual pharmacists, permits the pharmacy, in many cases, to accommodate the
religious beliefs of its employees while preserving the rights of customers to
access their medications.
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