Stocking Up on Morning-After Pills Won’t Reduce Unintended Pregnancies

morning-after pills
Share:
+ posts

Stocking up on the morning-after pill will not reduce unintended pregnancies, according to a professor who has strongly backed the provision of such drugs.

Professor James Trussell of Princeton University said such strategies simply don’t work because people forget to take the pills.

Research also suggests that stocking up on the morning-after pill may encourage people to take more risks with unprotected sex.

The morning-after pill can end the life of an early human embryo.

Trussell, who has actively promoted making the morning-after pill more widely available, analyzed 15 studies from around the world that looked at the impact of giving women such pills in advance.

All but one of them showed it had no effect on reducing later abortions or unwanted pregnancies.

And one research paper—of 1,500 women in America—appeared to show that such schemes made people more inclined to have unprotected sex.

Trussell commented: “I just don’t think it’s a strategy that is going to lead to a reduction in unintended pregnancies or abortions.”

He also said there is “a lot of unprotected sex out there,” and unless women take the morning-after pill every time they will eventually “end up getting pregnant.”

The professor is a senior fellow at the pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute and a supporter of the abortion group Planned Parenthood.

Ahead of last year’s Olympics, women in Greater London were told to stock up on the morning-after pill.

Under the British Pregnancy Advisory Service’s controversial scheme the morning-after pill was to be delivered to women’s homes after a brief phone consultation.

In February this year the Scottish government was urged to allow the morning-after pill to be handed out in schools.

A group of NHS experts made the call, which faced criticism for being irresponsible and pouring “more fuel on the flames.”

And in 2011 a scheme that offered free morning-after pills in Wales was shown to have little impact on teenage pregnancy.

Research into a pilot scheme in Bridgend showed despite increased uptake “the trend in conceptions for Bridgend was not significantly different to the rest of Wales.”

Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

A woman starting a fast.

Jentezen Franklin: Why Fast?

Today, I am thrilled to see millions of Christians worldwide placing such a great emphasis on prayer and fasting. Looking back over our ministry and seeing all God has done as we continue to seek Him every year in an...

John Ramirez

John Ramirez Gives a Spiritual Warning for 2024

In a recent message, John Ramirez gave a warning for the spiritual battles that lay ahead of us in 2024. “The Lord spoke to me regarding 2024. He says, ‘speak to My people. It’s not a happy message; it’s a...

Prepping for disasters.

Are You Prepared for the Potential of Societal Breakdown?

In the new Netflix film, “Leave The World Behind,” a haunting vision of societal breakdown unfolds as an oil tanker crashes into a tourist beach, planes fall from the sky and technology that underpins civilization fails. Though fictional, the movie...

digital rendering of 2024

10 Biblical Promises for a Blessed 2024

The Scriptures provide us with numerous conditional promises and commands that, if followed, will ultimately ensure a blessed future. This doesn’t imply that walking with God will shield us from all challenges or suffering. It pertains to the rewarding outcomes...

1 2 3 4 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top