AOL News has a new home! The Huffington Post.
Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!The FDA may endorse a new pill that says it prevents pregnancy for up to five days after unprotected sex -- two days more than Plan B, the morning-after pill already approved for prescription use in the United States. The pill, sold abroad as ellaOne, is already approved to prevent pregnancy in over 22 countries. In the United States, though, where many pro-life groups consider the morning-after pill to be abortion, ella may face considerable opposition. The Washington Post reports that the controversy may be especially fierce because the new morning-after pill bears a close chemical ...
Now that the balloons have come down from 50th-birthday celebrations of the Pill, I want to delicately point out the elephant in the room on biological destiny: Women remain the only ones in charge of preventing pregnancy. For those of us who grew up during the post-Pill era, the idea of woman's biological imperative to control her own fertility – the dream of feminists from Margaret Sanger, who Jamie Stiehm so beautifully eulogized, to Simone de Beauvoir and Betty Friedan – surpassed privilege, and became a right before we were born. Whether we opted to take the Pill or not, the ...
Frances Tobin: Going On the Pill: An Empowering Moment for Young Women When I was 16 years old, I took the advice of my fifth-grade teacher -- whose sex education class taught me all I needed to know about my body, its power and the personal responsibility and authority I had over it -- and asked my doctor for my first prescription of birth control pills. Though I wasn't yet sexually active, the prescription was something I had planned, for quite some time, to discuss with my family doctor, who had been treating me for as long as I could remember. The Pill was -- and still is -- a symbol of ...
(March 2) -- Mullahs in Afghanistan are trying new strategies to prevent an ongoing health and economic crisis caused by high fertility and maternal mortality rates: They're passing out birth control pills and distributing condoms. The tactics might come as a surprise, given that women living under the Taliban faced centuries of repression and intolerance, including bans on work, socializing and choice of husband -- often in the name of Islam. But things are changing, and it's that same faith being cited as the motivation behind the bid to improve contraception use and reduce the number of ...
Follow Politics Daily
POPULAR
News From Our Partners




Top News
More News
More on Aol
Local News
More Blog/Sites
Sites and Services