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| Promoting
Promiscuity: The Morning After Pill ©2001 The Christian Institute |
The
current situation
A reckless policy
Promoting
promiscuity
The failure of 'safer sex' approaches
The morning after pill encourages unsafe
sex
This will increase the incidence of
Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)
Virtually no safeguards
The price is bound to fall
The
current situation
The Government intends to make the morning after pill available
without prescription from Chemists to women and girls aged over
16. This new measure provisionally came into force on 1 January
2001, but either House of Parliament has the right to quash this
move within forty days of the order being tabled.
The order tabled by the Government can be 'annulled' by a vote in
either House. Baroness Young has tabled an annulment motion. A vote
is expected in The House of Lords on Monday 29 January 2001.
William Hague MP and Liam Fox MP have also tabled a similar motion
in the House of Commons.1
How the morning after pill works
The morning after pill, named Levonelle - 2, is taken to
prevent conception up to 72 hours after intercourse. If conception
has already occurred the pill prevents the embryo implanting in
the lining of the womb. Levonelle can therefore act as a form of
abortion (from a Christian, though not a legal, perspective).
A reckless policy
Promoting promiscuity
The
failure of 'safer sex' approaches
The
morning after pill encourages unsafe sex
This
will increase the incidence of Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)
Note
In a separate move (not affected by this vote), some school nurses
are prescribing the morning after pill to girls. Chemists are also
lawfully giving the pills to 15 year old girls. This is because
some health authorities are using new legal powers given to them
by the Government7
to allow nurses and Pharmacists to prescribe drugs directly.
References
1 See Early Day Motion 120 [Medicines]
(SI 2000 No 3231) in session 2000/2001
2 Teenage Pregnancy, A White Paper (Cm
4342), The Social Exclusion Unit, June 1999, page 6
3 Figures taken from 1997 & 1999
Abortion Statistics Series AB nos.24 & 26, Office for National
Statistics, The Stationery Office, 1998 and 2000. See Table A, page
x (1997 statistics) and Table 15b, page 16 (1999 statistics)
4 Population Trends 100, Summer 2000,
The Stationery Office, page 38
5 Judith Roizen, Letter to The Times,
16 December 2000
6 National Sexual Health and HIV Strategy,
Department of Health, 25 September 2000 at http://www.doh.gov.uk/nshs/background.htm
7 Prescription Only Medicines (Human
Use) Amendment Order 2000, 17 July 2000
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