To add a coda to a story we’ve been following for quite a while, the Obama administration restrictions on the availability for the best-known emergency contraceptive pill are no more.
After years of political delays, the Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved over-the-counter sale of Plan B One-Step emergency contraception to women and girls without age or point-of-sale restrictions.
In a statement announcing the change, the FDA said it was complying with an order from U.S. District Court Judge Edward Korman, who had previously slammed the Obama administration’s obstructionism over access to emergency contraception as “politically motivated, scientifically unjustified, and contrary to agency precedent.”
“It’s about time,” said Chris Iseli. “It’s taken too long to bring emergency contraception out from behind the pharmacy counter.”
Going forward, the restrictions have been eliminated — those seeking to purchase the emergency contraception can do so regardless of age, with no ID or prescription, right off the drugstore shelf.









