Health company sees 300% spike in emergency contraceptive requests following Roe v. Wade leak

FAN Editor

Telehealth company Nurx has seen a spike in requests for emergency contraception driven by fears that the landmark Roe v. Wade case could be overturned. 

Since Monday, there has been a 300% spike in requests to have emergency contraceptives, such as Plan B, “on hand,” Nurx CEO Varsha Rao told FOX Business. That’s on top of the hundreds of requests the company gets on a normal basis, she added. 

Nurx provides specialized, personalized health care services, including prescribing birth control, testing for sexually transmitted infections and HIV prevention, to over a million patients remotely. 

SUPREME COURT SET TO OVERTURN ROE V. WADE, LEAKED DRAFT OPINION SHOWS: REPORT

The company’s provider said this is the biggest spike in emergency contraceptive requests it has ever seen. 

Nurx provides specialized and personalized healthcare, including prescribing birth control, STI testing and HIV prevention, to over a million patients remotely.  (Nurx)

Emergency contraceptives are not an abortion pill and can’t stop a pregnancy, Rao says. Instead, it stops ovulation from occurring and should be taken as soon as possible. 

Nurx only recommends it in an emergency. However, requests are flooding in, with one patient saying they put in a request “just in case” as a result of the political climate. 

Rao doesn’t see this abating, either. 

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

If Roe V. Wade, which legalized abortion nationwide, is overturned, individual states will be allowed to aggressively restrict or outright ban abortions. 

Rao says the company is concerned that a reversal of Roe could eventually impact birth control access as well. 

It’s a fear Nurx patients share as well.

Nurx provides specialized and personalized healthcare, including prescribing birth control, STI testing and HIV prevention, to over a million patients remotely.  (Nurx)

“Not trying to sound crazy, but what will happen if Roe v. Wade is overturned? Will I still be able to get birth control through you guys?” Rao recalled one patient asking. 

Rao says Nurx is a female-focused company, and “any actions that limit, in our view, access to any type of health care for women is a step backwards.”  

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

The company is in the midst of trying to ease patient concerns while doing everything it can to make birth control accessible. Though, its primary focus recently has been on making emergency contraceptives accessible. 

To do so, the company has enabled overnight shipping for emergency contraception and is making sure that it is well-staffed, so it can “respond to requests on a very timely basis,” she said.

“When you talk about health care, you can’t ignore women’s health. It is inextricably linked,” Rao added. 

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Georgia high school athletic group bans transgender athletes

ATLANTA — The main athletic association for Georgia high schools voted Wednesday to ban transgender boys and girls from playing on the school sports teams matching their gender identity, saying instead that students must play on teams that match the sex listed on their birth certificates at birth. The Georgia […]

You May Like