Tuesday, May 29, 2007

We're Moving Backwards

We have pharmacists hopping on high horses telling people they are too holy to dispense contraceptives (while having no idea if the prescription is for birth control or some abnormal condition), the Brazilian government is trying to make sure that all women have what they need to plan their own family.

Just weeks after Pope Benedict XVI denounced government-backed contraception in a visit to Brazil, the president unveiled a program Monday to provide cheap birth control pills at 10,000 drug stores across the country.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the plan will give poor Brazilians "the same right that the wealthy have to plan the number of children they want."

Brazil already hands out free condoms and birth control pills at government-run pharmacies. But many poor people in Latin America's largest country don't go to those pharmacies, so Silva's administration decided to offer the pills at drastically reduced prices at private drug stores, said Health Minister Jose Gomes Temporao.

The price for a year's supply of birth control pills under the new program would be $2.40, and anyone rich or poor can buy the pills by simply showing a government-issued identification card that almost all Brazilians carry.

The number of outlets selling the pills will start at 3,500 and is expected to rise to 10,000 by the end of this year. When the $51 million program is fully under way, the government expects to be handing out 50 million packages of birth control pills each year.

Each government-subsidized package with enough pills to last a month will cost 20 cents. They now retail for $2.56 to $25.60.

20 cents per month? Wow! I really wish they'd do that here. There are a lot of people who need this kind of access.

2 Comments:

At 10:13 AM, Blogger PC said...

I wish I could get mine for 25.60. I pay over $55 for mine because my insurance won't cover them. :(

 
At 10:33 AM, Blogger Qusan said...

The government would rather pay thousands for the birth and upkeep of unplanned/unwanted children than a few bucks to help someone make good, sound choices.

 

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