The Obama administration has gone to Plan C on Plan B.
Backed into a legal corner, the Justice Department said Monday it would drop its appeal of Judge Edward Korman's
ruling last April
The action came five days after an
appeals court refused to delay
With few other avenues of appeal, the Justice Department said it would instead obey the original order, sort of.
What the administration is now proposing is to have the makers of the most popular emergency contraceptive product –
Plan B One Step
The letter warns, however, that the makers of Plan B One Step could be granted "marketing exclusivity," which presumably means a waiting period before generic copies could join the product on pharmacy and retail shelves.
And in a reversal of the situation that would have been created last week by the appeals court, the FDA says it "will not at this time take steps to change the approval status of the two-pill Plan B or its generic equivalents." According to the government, "there are fewer data available regarding the actual use of Plan B" meaning the use of the two-pill product "as a nonprescription product by younger adolescents," compared to the one-pill product.
That means the two-pill products will remain prescription-only and behind the pharmacy counter for those younger than 17.
Still, advocates of easier access to the drugs were pleased by the administration's action.
"This decision by the Administration affirms what feminists have been fighting for all along – the Morning-After Pill should be available to females of all ages, on the shelf at any convenience store, just like aspirin or condoms," said Annie Tummino, the lead plaintiff in the
long-running lawsuit
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