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Harm reduction or women's rights? Debating access to emergency contraceptive pills in Canada and the United States.

作者信息

Wynn L L, Erdman Joanna N, Foster Angel M, Trussell James

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia.

出版信息

Stud Fam Plann. 2007 Dec;38(4):253-67. doi: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2007.00138.x.

Abstract

This article compares the ethical pivot points in debates over nonprescription access to emergency contraceptive pills in Canada and the United States. These include women's right to be informed about the contraceptive method and its mechanism of action, pharmacists' conscientious objection concerning the dispensing of emergency contraceptive pills, and rights and equality of access to the method, especially for poor women and minorities. In both countries, arguments in support of expanding access to the pills were shaped by two competing orientations toward health and sexuality. The first, "harm reduction," promotes emergency contraception as attenuating the public health risks entailed in sex. The second orientation regards access to pills as a question of women's right to engage in nonprocreative sex and to choose from among all reproductive health-care options. The authors contend that arguments for expanding access to emergency contraceptive pills that frame issues in terms of health and science are insufficient bases for drug regulation; ultimately, women's health is also a matter of women's rights.

摘要

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