PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

1 in 5 young men unable to purchase emergency contraception

Mystery shopper study shows males' access to the morning after pill was limited by nearly three-quarters of pharmacies

2014-09-09
(Press-News.org) September 9, 2014 -- Male shoppers in search of emergency contraception do not always have an easy time making these purchases and may be turned away at their local pharmacies. A "mystery shopper" survey conducted in New York City by researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and Columbia University Medical Center showed that males had a 20 percent likelihood of not being able to purchase emergency contraception. Nearly three-quarters of the pharmacies in the study created barriers for the males to get the contraception. This is the first research to specifically target males' accessibility to emergency contraception. Findings are online in the publication Contraception. Pharmacies in Washington Heights, East Harlem and the Upper East Side were surveyed on the contraception's availability and cost. Neighborhoods were selected for their different racial and ethnic makeup, socioeconomic status, and rates of teenage and young adult pregnancies. Young men, aged 19, 25, and 28, posing as shoppers asked to purchase the morning-after-pill for their female partners and gave the reason that the condom broke. Hours of weekend operation—when most of these purchases are made—were also taken into account. Wealthier neighborhoods had pharmacies with longer weekend hours, although the contraception was more costly than in low-income areas. Overall, 81 percent of the 158 pharmacies surveyed had emergency contraception available to sell to the male researchers,. Of the 30 pharmacies in which males could not access the contraception, 73 percent required the presence of a female or her identification card at the time of purchase and 27 percent "reported" they did not have the product in stock, which is consistent with previous studies in New York City of both males and females. "There are a few potential explanations for requiring the presence of "a" female or her identification," noted David Bell, MD, MPH, associate professor of Population and Family Health at the Mailman School of Public Health and associate professor of Pediatrics at Columbia University Medical Center. "One possible explanation, the pharmacist may have thought that to comply with the age restriction the female needed to be present. Of note this research was conducted prior to the lifting of the age restriction. A second potential explanation is that pharmacists conscientiously objected to EC overall or its purchase by males. Anecdotally, speaking with a few pharmacists about the results, the request may have been a covert way to determine the presence or lack of coercion in a relationship. " The Food and Drug Administration has supported over-the-counter access for males to purchase emergency contraception, with the same age restrictions as for females, since the initial ruling in 2006. A majority of the pharmacists gave correct instructions on use and hours of effectiveness, either 72 hours or 5 days. However, several pharmacists gave a range of misinformation regarding the effective timing of the contraception: 24, 36, and 48 hours. One pharmacist told the shopper that the pill will cause a miscarriage/abortion; another said it was associated with birth defects. "Cost and timely access are still the key issues that remain today," said Dr. Bell, who is also medical director of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital's Family Planning Clinic/Young Men's Clinic, a provider of primary care services to adolescent and young men. "Despite being less expensive in the low-income neighbor- hoods, cost may still be a barrier to purchase for many individuals. Males and females in lower-socioeconomic neighborhoods also may have less access to the contraception because fewer pharmacies have extended hours on Saturday and Sunday when unprotected sex is most likely to occur." Dr. Bell stresses the importance of incorporating males in the national dialogue on emergency contraception and says that research on pharmacy access to the pills by males going forward should be approached differently. "Another area of concern is the notion of pharmacists who may refuse to dispense the morning-after-pill for personal beliefs. In the future, research needs to explore young men's knowledge and attitudes regarding this means of contraception, their intentions to accept advance provision of the pills with condoms, and any implications of coercion between males and females related to emergency contraception." INFORMATION: About Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health Founded in 1922, Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health pursues an agenda of research, education, and service to address the critical and complex public health issues affecting New Yorkers, the nation and the world. The Mailman School is the third largest recipient of NIH grants among schools of public health. Its over 450 multi-disciplinary faculty members work in more than 100 countries around the world, addressing such issues as preventing infectious and chronic diseases, environmental health, maternal and child health, health policy, climate change & health, and public health preparedness. It is a leader in public health education with over 1,300 graduate students from more than 40 nations pursuing a variety of master's and doctoral degree programs. The Mailman School is also home to numerous world-renowned research centers including ICAP (formerly the International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs) and the Center for Infection and Immunity. For more information, please visit http://www.mailman.columbia.edu


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sickle cell patients who experience discrimination miss out on treatment

2014-09-09
Experiencing discrimination because of their race or health condition can influence just how much trust people put into the health profession. In fact, having these experiences was associated with a 53-percent increase in the chances that someone suffering from sickle cell disease will not follow their doctors' orders, says Carlton Haywood Jr. of the Berman Institute of Bioethics and the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in the US. Haywood led a study appearing in The Journal of General Internal Medicine, published by Springer, into the experiences of how patients who suffer ...

National Renewable Energy Laboratory updates cetane data used for development of energy efficient fuels and engines

2014-09-09
The Energy Department's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) has released a long-anticipated update to the source-of-record for cetane number data. This information is vital to the development of new, energy-efficient, low-carbon fuels and compatible engines. Researchers, as well as members of the engine, vehicle, and fuel industries, rely on these numbers to target compounds for development of new fuels capable of greater energy efficiency, cleaner emissions, and maximum performance in diesel engines. A cetane number is a relative ranking of fuels based on the ...

Penn study finds genetic mutations linked with ethnic disparities in cancer

Penn study finds genetic mutations linked with ethnic disparities in cancer
2014-09-09
One of the goals of genome sequencing is to identify genetic mutations associated with increased susceptibility to disease. Yet by and large these discoveries have been made in people of European or Asian ancestry, resulting in an incomplete picture of global genetic variation in disease vulnerability. In a new study published in the journal BMC Medical Genomics, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have addressed this omission. Their investigation identified more than 30 previously undescribed mutations in important regulatory molecules called microRNAs. Many ...

NASA sees Tropical Storm Fengshen looking more like a frontal system

NASA sees Tropical Storm Fengshen looking more like a frontal system
2014-09-09
NASA's Terra satellite captured an image of Tropical Storm Fengshen as it continued moving away from the east coast of Japan. Satellite imagery showed that the storm resembled a frontal system more than a tropical storm because it appeared stretched from southwest to northeast NASA's Terra satellite flew over Tropical Storm Fengshen on Sept. 9 at 1:05 UTC (Sept. 8 at 9:05 p.m. EDT) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument captured an image of the massive storm. The MODIS image showed that the bulk of Fenghsen's clouds were north and northeast ...

The search for Ebola immune response targets

2014-09-09
The effort to develop therapeutics and a vaccine against the deadly Ebola virus disease (EVD) requires a complex understanding of the microorganism and its relationship within the host, especially the immune response. Adding to the challenge, EVD can be caused by any one of five known species within the genus Ebolavirus (EBOV), in the Filovirus family. Now, researchers at the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology (La Jolla Institute) and the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University of California, San Diego are assisting the scientific community ...

'Solid' light could compute previously unsolvable problems

Solid light could compute previously unsolvable problems
2014-09-09
Researchers at Princeton University have begun crystallizing light as part of an effort to answer fundamental questions about the physics of matter. The researchers are not shining light through crystal – they are transforming light into crystal. As part of an effort to develop exotic materials such as room-temperature superconductors, the researchers have locked together photons, the basic element of light, so that they become fixed in place. "It's something that we have never seen before," said Andrew Houck, an associate professor of electrical engineering and one ...

An evolutionary approach to epidemics

2014-09-09
An evolutionary analysis of public health data during a major disease outbreak, such as bird flu, E. coli contamination of food or the current Ebola outbreak could help the emergency services plan their response and contain the disease more effectively. Details are reported in the International Journal of Innovative Computing and Applications. Dehai Liu of the Dongbei University of Finance and Economics, in Dalian, Liaoning, China, and colleagues have used evolutionary game theory to examine the data associated with a major public health event - the emergence of a new ...

Squeezed quantum communication

Squeezed quantum communication
2014-09-09
This news release is available in German. It could be difficult for the NSA to hack encrypted messages in the future – at least if a technology being investigated by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light in Erlangen and the University Erlangen-Nürnberg will be successful: quantum cryptography. The physicists are now laying the foundation to make this technique, which can already be used for the generation of secret keys, available for a wider range of applications. They are the first scientists to send a pulse of bright light in a particularly ...

First evidence for water ice clouds found outside solar system

First evidence for water ice clouds found outside solar system
2014-09-09
VIDEO: A team of scientists led by Carnegie's Jacqueline Faherty has discovered the first evidence of water ice clouds on an object outside of our own Solar System. Water ice clouds... Click here for more information. Washington, D.C.—A team of scientists led by Carnegie's Jacqueline Faherty has discovered the first evidence of water ice clouds on an object outside of our own Solar System. Water ice clouds exist on our own gas giant planets--Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune--but ...

Fires continue in Northern California

Fires continue in Northern California
2014-09-09
Storms have been the major cause of the huge fires that California has been battling in its northern regions. A lightning strike from a storm on August 12, 2014 started the fires in the Happy Camp Complex. There are currently 99,200 acres affected and the fire complex is at 30% containment. At around 4pm PDT on September 08, the smoke inversion lifted and fire behavior significantly increased on the south and southeast sides of the fire with spotting distances of up to a mile. Multiple spot fires occurred across the Scott River from Swanson Gulch and McGuffy Creek. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research shows PTSD, anxiety may affect reproductive health of women firefighters

U of M Medical School research team receives $1.2M grant to study Tourette syndrome treatment

In the hunt for new and better enzymes, AI steps to the fore

Females have a 31% higher associated risk of developing long COVID, UT Health San Antonio-led RECOVER study shows

Final synthetic yeast chromosome unlocks new era in biotechnology

AI-powered prediction model enhances blood transfusion decision-making in ICU patients

MD Anderson Research Highlights for January 22, 2025

Scholastica announces integration with Crossmark by Crossref to expand its research integrity support

Could brain aging be mom’s fault? The X chromosome factor

Subterranean ‘islands’: strongholds in a potentially less turbulent world

Complete recombination map of the human-genome, a major step in genetics

Fighting experience plays key role in brain chemical’s control of male aggression

Trends in preventive aspirin use by atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk

Sex differences in long COVID

Medically recommended vs nonmedical cannabis use among US adults

Spanish scientists discover how the gut modulates the development of inflammatory conditions

Compact comb lights the way for next-gen photonics

New research reveals how location influences how our immune system fights disease

AI in cell research: Moscot reveals cell dynamics in unprecedented detail

New study finds social programs could reduce the spread of HIV by 29%

SIDS discovery could ID babies at risk of sudden death

Ozone exposure linked to hypoxia and arterial stiffness

Princeton Chemistry develops copper-detection tool to discover possible chelation target for lung cancer

Drug candidate eliminates breast cancer tumors in mice in a single dose

WSU study shows travelers are dreaming forward, not looking back

Black immigrants attract white residents to neighborhoods

Hot or cold? How the brain deciphers thermal sensations

Green tea-based adhesive films show promise as a novel treatment for oral mucositis

Single-cell elemental analysis using Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS)

BioChatter: making large language models accessible for biomedical research

[Press-News.org] 1 in 5 young men unable to purchase emergency contraception
Mystery shopper study shows males' access to the morning after pill was limited by nearly three-quarters of pharmacies