US regulators approve first over-the-counter contraceptive pill
No age restriction on sales for Perrigo's once-a-day Opill, which will be available in stores and online early next year
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the first over-the-counter contraceptive pill, allowing millions of women and girls in the country to buy contraception without a prescription at a time when some states have sought to restrict access to birth control and abortion.
FDA officials said on Thursday it cleared Perrigo's Opill - an every day, prescription-only hormonal contraception first approved in 1973 - to be sold over-the-counter. The pill will be available in stores and online in the first quarter of next year, and there will be no age restrictions on sales. The regulatory approval paves the way for people to purchase the pill without a prescription for the first time since oral contraceptives became widely available in the 1960s.
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