Posts Tagged ‘Dr Shannon Bertha’

FDA approves the Morning After Pill, Over the Counter for 17-year-olds

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009 by Shannon Bertha, ACS, PhD

On Thursday, April 23rd, 2009, the FDA approved sale of the morning after pill, over the counter for 17-year-olds.  Prior to this, it was available over the counter to people 18-years-old and older.  Though this may be a step in the right direction, to increase availability and access to emergency contraception, we must wonder what kind of impact this will have.

If people are able to access this at a younger age, does this mean there will be fewer unintended pregnancies and abortions?  Or possibly a rise in the STD rate?  Though this is an improvement, this must be backed up with reliable information via the education system, i.e. sex education.  Many teens are concerned about pregnancy, in most cases,  more so than STD’s.  Often, young people in the US who are using birth control do not worry much about STD’s because they think they are being safe, by preventing pregnancy.  However, in the Netherlands, most young women go on birth control as young as  14.  But, via the school systems and sex education, protection from BOTH pregnancy and STD’s is so ingrained in them, that young individuals use both condoms and hormonal birth control (IE. pills, patch, ring, shot).  In the Netherlands, it is referred to as “Double Dutch”.

So, although this is now available for younger people, it must be backed up with education.  The morning after pill is to be used in case of emergency, not a primary contraceptive method.  In addition, just because this is available, and can prevent pregnancy, it does NOT prevent STD’s.

Ever wonder a cervix looks like?

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009 by Shannon Bertha, ACS, PhD

I, like many people are fascinated when television shows surgeries that are being performed or one that takes you inside an emergency room.  Anything, where I can take a look inside a human body and marvel at its many functions, working together in unison.  It is one thing to see a diagram or chart, a very different thing to see the real thing.  In this day of technological advances, we are able to peer in the human body and actually see parts of the human body. 

Check out:  http://www.beautifulcervix.com/ photos-of- cervix/

A 25-year-old woman took pictures of her cervix, everyday, for a month.  Look at the changes one can see just within one cycle of a woman’s period.  Not many of us, usually just people who perform gyno exams, have gotten this type of view.