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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWI: Assembly lawmakers look at allowing pharmacists to prescribe birth control
Patients over the age of 18 would be able to get a birth control prescription from a pharmacist rather than a primary care physician, under a bill considered by Wisconsin Assembly lawmakers on Tuesday.
Rep. Joel Kitchens (R-Sturgeon Bay), the lead Assembly bill author, told the Assembly Health, Aging and Long-Term Care committee that he decided to reintroduce the bill because of continued barriers to accessing birth control and the high costs associated with unplanned pregnancies.
Were proposing AB 176 to give women more choices in reproductive health care, decrease the number of unplanned pregnancies and abortions in our state, save taxpayer dollars and reduce generational poverty. Kitchens said.
The bill was initially announced alongside Republican bill that would update Wisconsins 1849 abortion ban to include rape and incest exceptions during the first trimester and clarify the life of the mother exception already included in the law.
Currently in Wisconsin, patients seeking birth control must make an appointment with a doctor or advanced practice nurse, answer a mandatory list of questions regarding their health and then if it is safe for them to take hormonal birth control, they are given that prescription to take to a pharmacy to be filled.
https://wisconsinexaminer.com/2023/06/07/assembly-lawmakers-look-at-allowing-pharmacists-to-prescribe-birth-control/

Tetrachloride
(9,164 posts)Easier to find.
CTyankee
(67,254 posts)require a call to my doctor and the pharmacist can easily answer and is certainly within his or her level of expertise. Accessibility to answers is key, especially since I am a caregiver for my husband who is disabled and also diabetic.
WarGamer
(18,017 posts)Most of the civilized world allows it.
But for some reason... we protect HealthCare INC.
roamer65
(37,805 posts)Illinois and Michigan.