Originally posted by: AreaCode707
Originally posted by: JohnOfSheffield
Originally posted by: Fear No Evil
Originally posted by: JohnOfSheffield
Originally posted by: Fear No Evil
Why stop at 17? Why not 16? 14? 12? 10? 8? I don't know where the line is exactly but there IS a line.
15 is a pretty good limit but even younger children than that should be able to make safe choices under doctors supervision, of course, that would be rape and the doctor would be legally obliged to report it.
But don't let facts get in the way of your retarded thoughts, just keep spewing your idiocy.
Thanks for not resorting to personal attacks.
Ok, lets make it 15. And when the medication causes complications to the mother. Do we force the parents to pay for it? What if they don't have health insurance? Lets just say for the sake of argument the 17 year old takes Plan B, has MAJOR complications, and runs up 10's of thousands of dollars of medical bills. The parents don't have health insurance or not much. Do we hold them responsible for the choice of the 17 year old? If so, then why do they not get input.
How do you resolve this conflict? Do you have an answer or do you just spout off calling people stupid pieces of shit and retarded when you don't have an answer?
*sigh*
How don't you get this? There is nothing special about it, it's like aspirin or tylenol or whatever fucking drug you want.
If it's approved to be sold OTC it's as safe as any other drug sold OTC.
So a 15 year old takes a tylenol and gets sick from it, should the parents pay?
Truth is that you involve chastity and morals in the situation and it has absolutely NOTHING to do with the legal nor the medical perspective that you are trying to argue.
Until you get that and come back with an argument that doesn't "smell like teen Jeeebus spirit" i won't adress your argument again.
John, you need to differentiate between people that hold an opinion for solely moral reasons and people that hold an opinion for medical or medical mixed with moral reasons.
Several people have stated valid medical concerns with allowing ANY OTC prescription for teens, unrelated to plan b. You have failed to respond to these people and have basically attacked anyone that didn't automatically agree with you on every fine detail of the question at hand.
I also would suggest that you overestimate the safety of OTC drugs. It is possible for plan b, aspirin or Tylenol to cause life threatening and/or long term debilitating problems if used improperly without medical supervision. Trust me, I know - I was on doctor prescribed naproxyn for years and wound up with a stomach ulcer, even with the careful supervision of a doc.
OTC does NOT mean "perfectly safe under all conditions no matter what you do with it."