AreaCode707
Lifer
- Sep 21, 2001
- 18,447
- 133
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Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: AreaCode707
Originally posted by: JohnOfSheffield
I think it should be available to any woman, regardless of age, under medical supervision.
Not even the most hardcore fanatics on this forum would disagree with this, i think.
Well, apart from butterbean and duwelon who probably protests the existance of their own penises.
Mm, I doubt the ability of a 17 year old girl (having once been one) to know when a side effect is potentially serious and to seek timely help, especially when seeking medical help might interfere with their attempts to keep secrets from their parents. For that reason I think parents should always know what medications their kids are on. Parents are responsible for their health and well being until they are 18.
http://www.fwhc.org/birth-cont...cinfo.htm#side-effects
I think doctors and FDA sans holly rolers should decide that. If it's medially safe like any other OTC medicine, then sell it. If you don't want to sell it because of Jebus, go fuck yourself.
<- had a scare couple years ago, had to wait 2 days to get plan B. Fucking bushwackos.
There is nothing wrong with having parents know what their children are taking.
Do you feel the same way about ALL other OTC drugs? Should the law mandate that minors cannot purchase any OTC drugs?
I'm going to venture a guess and say no. This implies you only care about the OTC drugs that somehow encroach your dogma. So ultimately you're not concerned about your child's well being, but rather are concerned about following the bible.
I have no problem with parental consent, but in this case, much like with the HPV vaccine, it's got NOTHING to do with health or well being.
Yep, I think that about all OTC drugs. A kid that pops OTC naproxyn all the time on an empty stomach is put at risk of stomach damage, for example, something a high school football player taking meds to reduce inflammation on minor injuries might not know. Some OTC acne medications mess with your hormones and can really screw you up for a period of time, as can birth control meds taken for the sole purpose of regulating your period (removing the morality question). There are plenty of OTC meds that, when mixed with alcohol, become a problem. OTC meds can be used for deliberate overdoses.
OTC doesn't necessarily mean safe; it means safe when taken as directed. Teenagers often lack the ability to accurately project the implications of their actions in the long term future. As a parent, I think it's important that you are at least aware of what your kids are taking and have the opportunity to discuss it with them and help them monitor effects.
