By

Ryan Jaslow /

CBS News/ November 26, 2012, 2:21 PM

Pediatrics group says morning-after pills should be prescribed in advance to teen girls

CBS News

The morning-after pill should be prescribed in advance to teens just in case they one day need it, says the country's leading medical society of pediatricians.

The American Academy of Pediatrics said Monday that emergency contraceptives like Plan B and Next Choice can be used to curb a U.S. teen pregnancy rate which, while declining over the past two decades, still surpasses that of other developed countries.

"Adolescents are more likely to use emergency contraception if it has been prescribed in advance of need," the academy's Committee on Adolescence wrote in the statement, which was published online Nov. 26 in Pediatrics and will also be in the December print issue. "Pediatricians have an important role, through their interactions with adolescents, to address the major public health objective of continuing to reduce adolescent pregnancy in the United States."

Emergency contraceptives are indicated for use following sexual assaults, unprotected intercourse, condom breakage or slippage, or missed doses of hormonal contraceptives such as the pill, patch and ring.

In all U.S. states, females 17 and older and males 18 and older can obtain emergency contraception without prescription from a doctor or pharmacist, while those under 17 need a script.

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The statement's authors note that about 34 out of every 1,000 15 to 19-year-olds give birth and nearly 80 percent of pregnancies in adolescents are unintended. While both hormonal birth control pills and condoms are very effective at reducing pregnancy chances, both methods require strict adherence or else they aren't effective, the committee notes. Missing birth control is a situation where emergency contraceptives could help reduce unwanted pregnancy, according to the committee.

The morning-after pill is most effective if used in the first 24 hours but can be taken up to 120 hours after unprotected intercourse.

"Studies have shown that adolescents are more likely to use emergency contraception if it has been prescribed in advance of need," wrote the committee. "However, a majority of practicing pediatricians and pediatric residents do not routinely counsel patients about emergency contraception and have not prescribed."

Increased access to contraceptives was a major reason the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) announced last Tuesday it wants birth control pills to be sold over-the-counter. The group argued that practical limitations of taking the pill every day could be curbed by making the pill more readily available. That could also reduce health risks to both mom and newborns and cut health care tax dollar burden, the group said.

In its new statement on morning-after contraceptives, the pediatrics academy said it aims to educate doctors about available emergency contraceptives, and to encourage routine counseling and advance prescriptions of emergency contraceptives as a public health strategy to reduce unwanted pregnancies.

The statement also encourages pediatricians to push for better insurance coverage and increased access to emergency contraception for teens regardless of age.

Though this may create an ethical dilemma for some physicians and pharmacists, the academy said pediatricians have a duty to inform their patients about relevant treatment options and have a "moral obligation" to refer patients to other doctors who will provide and educate about those services.

Steven Mosher, president of the anti-abortion rights organization the Population Research Institute, of Front Royal, Va., told WebMD the new policy from the academy "is a violation of parents' rights and is also not in the best interest of the teenagers themselves."

Last December, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration was preparing to lift an age limit on Plan B One-Step emergency contraceptives which would have made the pills available over-the-counter. However Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius stepped in and blocked the move, because girls as young as 11 are physically capable of having kids, and data did not sufficiently show girls that young could properly understand how to use the product with adult guidance.

Dr. Robert Block, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said at the time, "The decision to continue restricting access to this safe and effective product is medically inexplicable."

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    Ryan Jaslow is CBSNews.com's health editor.

16 Comments Add a Comment
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justakcreader says:
Have any of you felt the pain a girl feels after taking the "morning after" pill? You don't just take a pill and are miraculously fine. How ridiculous to just randomly give it out in case it's needed. Spend the money on giving out condoms or birth control pills, rather than put something through this.
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saturn05 says:
I'm sure most wish kids would not have sex, but the reality of it is that they do, so why not protect themselves. Kids do not need to be having children, no matter if you are religious or not. It just doesn't make sense for anyone, the girl first of all. If parents can't help the situation, then too bad. I would rather have the kids have the protection than to have a bunch of unwanted pregnancies. And as far as the cost of all of this, what is the cost of taking care of the baby and mom who will probably end up on welfare.
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hercsurf1 says:
I see a lot of odd comments. Doctors are trained to look at medical issues in a practical way. Humans are ready to have sex in their teens. Thats when their bodies tell them they are ready for sex...thus why they have desires to, why they masturbate constantly, etc etc. Taking a pill is a much better outcome than having an unwanted pregnancy. Or getting pregnant and having an abortion. Yes condoms are preferred and for those that want to abstain when they are teens... Teens have sex people... just the way it is and always has been.... In the words of my great grandmother " I dont know what people are talking about...girls were always having sex in their teens..its just that they also got married earlier"
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newsreader61 says:
How about teaching these 'teens' to think with their appropriate organ (i.e., with their brains), before having sex. On the practical side: Who is going to pay for this? On the human aspect of the issue: this is yet another degradation of human sexuality to the level basic human need, like going to the bathroom.

As for these 'doctors', who should be more properly referred to as charlatans, I am sure they will be mightily rewarded by their pharma-con handlers. What kind of doctor is the one whose goal in life is to pump children's bodies full with chemicals that we do not even know the long term effects yet? I can tell you: the kind that shares the profit of the drug industry whose interest is not about developing healthy, balanced lifestyles that weans people of prescription drugs, but a population that more and more becomes dependent on their products.
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hercsurf1 replies:
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Sex and sexuality is a basic human need I hate to break it to you. You need to grow up a little.

Teens have sex, there bodies and desires are ready for it when they are that age. While I agree that condoms and non drug related alternatives are preferable ( unless you are thinking they shoudl wait until marriage or something nutty like that), its a much better alterative to them getting pregnant.
newsreader61 replies:
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@HERCSURF1

"Sex and sexuality is a basic human need"

Yep, my dog thinks like you too ...
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Burt_Z says:
Maybe teens should carry some kind of emergency kit, like a holster full of pills and/or condoms. I mean you never know, they could be walking down the street, and all of a sudden - out of the blue they'll be overtaken by the urge to aggressively start copulating with somebody right there on the spot!

We need to teach teens that they are in fact people. People who need to act responsibly and morally. Hollywood pop culture has been polluting our children for decades. Telling kids that they are basically no better than animals, who simply must go through life like dogs. Forever at the mercy of their basest biological functions, existing only to satisfy their 'urges'.
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hercsurf1 replies:
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You sound like a barrel of laughs. Hate to break it to you but hollywood didnt cause teen pregnancies..its bee going on forever.
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ballwyllo says:
I agree let's give all teens the morning after pill in a locket they can wear around their necks. "In case of emergency break glass" - and their parents can check each night to see if they had an "emergency". Let's make sure this is covered by health insurance. We can even have Vera Wang or some other designer manufacture the lockets. Heck why not use the old candy vending machines in school to distribute. As a recent convert to the liberal side, I just love saying yes to every idea. This is so much easier.
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Burt_Z replies:
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Bravo! Well said!
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ugleyme says:
How about teaching self control and abstinence?
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robcypher replies:
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Yes, because those "abstinence only" programs have worked so well in schools where it's been implemented. 9_9
jagriswold replies:
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If self-control and abstinence were viable options you would have practiced self-control and abstained from making such a stupid comment.
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