Ennis & Ennis, P.A.
Attorneys at Law

Birth Control Patch Side Effects

www.ortho-evra-side-effects.com
Toll-Free: (800) 856-6405

Ortho Evra Side Effects Home Ortho Evra Lawsuit - Contact Ortho Evra Side Effects Lawyer
Ortho Evra Side Effects Home PageOrtho Evra Side Effects LawyersOrtho Evra Side Effects Attorney - Ortho Evra LawuitOrtho Evra NewsOrtho Evra Side Effects - Link PageContact the Ortho Evra Side Effects Lawyers Of Ennis & EnnisOrtho Evra Side Effects lawyer representing the injured in: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, & Canada  

Ortho Evra Side Effects

If you or someone you love has used the Ortho Evra Birth Control Patch and has experienced side effects such as: arrhythmia, heart attack, stroke, blood clots, or deep vein thrombosis (DVT) you need to know your legal rights. Call our Orth Evra side effects lawyers for a free legal consultation or to ask questions about a possible Ortho Evra lawsuit or Ortho Evra recall.
1-800-856-6405.



Offices:

Washington DC Office
1101 Pennsylvania Ave.
Suite 600
Washington DC 20004
Telephone: 202-756-2972
Toll Free: 1-800-856-6405


Miami Office
1111 Brickwell Avenue
11th Floor
Miami, FL 33131
Telephone: 305-913-7199
Toll Free: 1-800-856-6405

Fort Lauderdale Office
110 E. Broward Blvd.
Suite 1700
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
Telephone: 954-315-3934
Toll Free: 1-800-856-6405
Facsimile: 954-315-3914
Map It

Ortho Evra Patch News

Federal legislation has made birth control unaffordable for college students

-UTune Reader


09/20/2007 - It's gotten a lot more expensive for college women to buy birth control this year. As many students returned to campus this fall, higher prices of hormonal contraceptives like the pill and the patch have many cash-strapped collegians reevaluating whether birth control is worth the extra cash. At Arizona State University, the online student publication ASU Web Devil reports that birth control prices have risen roughly 200 percent in the past year.

Universities across the country cite similar numbers, and blame the same culprit for the price spike -- the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. The act, which went into effect in January, was designed to slash the federal deficit by $40 billion. To do that, the legislation recalculated Medicaid prescription rebates, and universities found themselves cut out of the drug discounts they had relied on.

Already Ann Roth, the campus pharmacy manager at the University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW), has seen sales of birth control dip and sales of Plan B -- the emergency contraceptive commonly referred to as the "morning after pill" -- rise, the Wilmington, North Carolina, Star-News reports. Roth has stopped selling the Ortho Evra skin patch all together since its new monthly price of over $50 wiped out demand.

Universities have seen this problem coming since the bill was signed in January of 2006. Schools like Washington University in St. Louis assembled stockpiles of birth control in anticipation of the increased prices. Now the drugs bought at previously discounted prices are running low. The oral contraceptive Tri-Cyclen Lo, which once retailed for $20 per month at Washington University, now costs $40, according to the school's newspaper.

It's gotten a lot more expensive for college women to buy birth control this year. As many students returned to campus this fall, higher prices of hormonal contraceptives like the pill and the patch have many cash-strapped collegians reevaluating whether birth control is worth the extra cash. At Arizona State University, the online student publication ASU Web Devil reports that birth control prices have risen roughly 200 percent in the past year.

Universities across the country cite similar numbers, and blame the same culprit for the price spike -- the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. The act, which went into effect in January, was designed to slash the federal deficit by $40 billion. To do that, the legislation recalculated Medicaid prescription rebates, and universities found themselves cut out of the drug discounts they had relied on.

Already Ann Roth, the campus pharmacy manager at the University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW), has seen sales of birth control dip and sales of Plan B -- the emergency contraceptive commonly referred to as the "morning after pill" -- rise, the Wilmington, North Carolina, Star-News reports. Roth has stopped selling the Ortho Evra skin patch all together since its new monthly price of over $50 wiped out demand.

Universities have seen this problem coming since the bill was signed in January of 2006.

Schools like Washington University in St. Louis assembled stockpiles of birth control in anticipation of the increased prices. Now the drugs bought at previously discounted prices are running low. The oral contraceptive Tri-Cyclen Lo, which once retailed for $20 per month at Washington University, now costs $40, according to the school's newspaper, Student Life.

College papers are sounding off on the issue. At Cornell University, a recent editorial in the Cornell Daily Sun inveighs against the school's administration, which no longer offers free HIV testing and has done nothing to offset the high prices of birth control. "Rising costs create disincentives for students to practice safe sex," charges the paper. "We believe that the University's failure to address this problem head-on is downright dangerous."

Roth has similar concerns. "I just worry about unwanted pregnancy in this population," she tells the Star-News. "It results in them having to drop out of school and not complete their education." Another fear is that young women won't get the additional reproductive health care they received when they came in to campus clinics for prescriptions. "My concern," the American College Health Association's director, Mary Hoban, tells the Star-News "is we'll lose women who have annual exams."

College papers are sounding off on the issue. At Cornell University, a recent editorial in the Cornell Daily Sun inveighs against the school's administration, which no longer offers free HIV testing and has done nothing to offset the high prices of birth control. "Rising costs create disincentives for students to practice safe sex," charges the paper. "We believe that the University's failure to address this problem head-on is downright dangerous."

Roth has similar concerns. "I just worry about unwanted pregnancy in this population," she tells the Star-News. "It results in them having to drop out of school and not complete their education." Another fear is that young women won't get the additional reproductive health care they received when they came in to campus clinics for prescriptions. "My concern," the American College Health Association's director, Mary Hoban, tells the Star-News "is we'll lose women who have annual exams."

If you or someone you love has used the Ortho Evra Birth Control Patch and has experienced side effects such as: arrhythmia, heart attack, stroke, blood clots, or deep vein thrombosis (DVT) you need to know your legal rights. Call our Orth Evra side effects lawyers for a free legal consultation or to ask questions about a possible Ortho Evra lawsuit or Ortho Evra recall.
1-800-856-6405.


Home | Free Case Evaluation | Contact Us ©2005 Ennis & Ennis, P.A.. All rights reserved

 

Free Consultations 1-800-856-6405