Argumentative Essay On Birth Control

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Sixty-two percent of women ages 10-40 use some type of contraception, of this sixty-two percent, twenty-eight percent utilize the pill (CDC). The pill is one of the safest, most effective ways to prevent a pregnancy; however the pill offers much more than just contraception. The perks of the pill specifically include “the prevention of acne, bone thinning, cysts in the breasts and ovaries, endometrial and ovarian cancers, serious infections in the ovaries, fallopian tubes, and uterus, iron deficiency (anemia), and PMS.” (Planned Parenthood). Luckily we live in a place where women have the right to access this amenity, but here’s the catch: women in the US are not unable to access birth control without a prescription in every state besides Oregon and California. …show more content…

Some women in the US are unfortunately unable to afford and access contraception, such as the pill. Making this over the counter would eliminate the inability to access, and essentially cut down the number of unwanted pregnancies. Reducing the number of unwanted pregnancies goes hand and hand with reducing abortions. The Washington University School of Medicine conducted a study showing that “when we eliminate barriers to contraceptives, abortion rates and teen pregnancy plummet” (McCarthy). The more money we put towards the prevention of pregnancies, the less money the United States will have to spend on teen pregnancies. The New England Journal of Medicine states, “In 2010, births involving teenage mothers cost the United States nearly $10 billion in increased public assistance and health care and in income lost as a result of lower educational attainment and reduced earnings among children born to teenage mothers” (McCarthy). Thus saving taxpayers billions of dollars