News

No prescription? No problem. Birth control pills hit shelves.

For the first time, a birth control pill is available to women in the United States without a prescription, expanding access to those who have difficulty seeing a health care provider or choose not to.  

Opill, the once-a-day oral medication in question, became available online in March, when it also started shipping to stores. The cost is $19.99 for a one-month supply or $49.99 for three months. This relatively low price makes it more affordable for most women, even without insurance. 

Why We Wrote This

While many states have restricted reproductive health care, many women in the United States will now have the freedom of easier access to a more affordable birth control pill that they can get without a prescription.

Advocates are calling the new over-the-counter option crucial to reproductive health care overall. In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision that allows states to govern abortion policy, many states have restricted reproductive health care, says Cathren Cohen of the UCLA Law Center on Reproductive Health, Law, and Policy. “Existing providers are struggling to meet patients’ needs.”

But some people are voicing reservations about the Food and Drug Administration granting unrestricted access to a hormone drug, especially for teenage girls. Removing medical doctors from the care chain, say detractors, leaves women to navigate reproductive health on their own. 

“Making it an over-the-counter option really just furthers this one-size-fits-all approach that has underserved women for so long,” says Emma Waters, senior researcher with The Heritage Foundation. 

For the first time in the United States, a birth control pill is available to women without a prescription, expanding access to people who have difficulty seeing a health care provider or choose not to. 

As states across the country grapple with abortion rights – whether protecting, restricting, or banning abortion – contraception exists in a less controversial space. But in the greater conversation about reproductive health care, advocates call this over-the-counter option crucial. 

“We still have health care deserts across the country,” says Cathren Cohen, staff attorney at the UCLA Law Center on Reproductive Health, Law, and Policy. “And so being able to just go directly to the pharmacy and purchase it there is a really amazing opportunity and very important.”

Why We Wrote This

While many states have restricted reproductive health care, many women in the United States will now have the freedom of easier access to a more affordable birth control pill that they can get without a prescription.

Some people are voicing reservations about the unrestricted access to the hormone drug, Opill, especially for teenage girls. Removing medical doctors from the care chain, say detractors, leaves women to navigate reproductive health on their own. 

“Making it an over-the-counter option really just furthers this one size fits all approach that has underserved women for so long,” says Emma Waters, senior researcher with The Heritage Foundation. “[Opill] doesn’t empower them in the ways that it seeks to.”

Maria had her mom for guidance. The 19-year-old University of San Francisco student went on birth control last summer, after her first year away at college. She had to wait until she got back home to Chicago so she could see her family doctor for a prescription. 

Previous ArticleNext Article