Mayor Michael Bloomberg continued his openness to premature sexual activity by adolescents by publicly airing his disagreement with HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius‘ decision to place age-limits on the availability of Plan B One-Step, the so-called “morning-after” contraceptive, to minor girls.
Mayor Bloomberg said,

 “We’ve had many, too many, unwed births in this country. It would be much better if these young girls didn’t get pregnant.”

Others would argue that it would be better if these young girls didn’t get engage in sexual intercourse in the first place. Over the counter access to Plan B One-Step, as Mayor Bloomberg and his Planned Parenthood allies prefer would enable sexually active girls as young as 11 to “self-abort” after unprotected sex. But Plan B would not protect against STDs, STIs or HIV/AIDS.

“We do, in the city, a lot to try to teach people and inform them of the consequences of being parents and the responsibilities and it would be much better if young girls didn’t get pregnant, but once that happens, I think that this should be available to anybody.” — Michael Bloomberg

In the above statement, Mayor Bloomberg seems to say that Plan B is useful as a post-coital contraceptive. I think he’s advocating that once young teenagers have sexual intercourse, they should freely avail themselves of the “morning-after” pill. So what’s to stop pre-adolescents and adolescents from having sex, if consequences, other than an STD, are washed away with a pill?
On this one, most Americans will trust the prudent judgment of President Obama and Secretary Sebelius.
Sebelius Says Teva Can Reapply to End Age Limits on Morning-After Pill

Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of U.S. Health and Human Services, said her decision against removing age controls on Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (TEVA)’s emergency contraceptive wasn’t political, and the company can reapply.

Teva can submit an application with more testing for label comprehension and use among the girls at younger reproductive ages, Sebelius said at a meeting on health-care jobs in New York. The comment came after Mayor Michael Bloomberg earlier today said he disagreed with Sebelius’s stand.

“There are always opportunities for the company to come back with additional data,” Sebelius told reporters after the meeting, held at LaGuardia Community College in Queens. “Subsequent discussions can take place.”

Sebelius overruled a recommendation by Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Margaret Hamburg on Dec. 7 to end the age restrictions on Teva’s Plan B One-Step contraceptive. It was the first time HHS reversed an agency approval.

“It is commonly understood that there are significant cognitive and behavioral differences between older adolescent girls and the youngest girls of reproductive age, which I believe are relevant to making this determination as to non- prescription availability of this product for all ages,” Sebelius wrote Hamburg in the Dec. 7 memo.

Hamburg had said she was ready to allow sales to girls younger than 17 based on “science-based evidence.”

Sebelius today said her decision wasn’t “about politics.”

President Barack Obama said he supported Sebelius’s decision the day after it occurred. Bloomberg, at today’s jobs meeting, split with the president, saying he agreed with the FDA chief.

‘Unwed Births’

“Why Sebelius decided to overrule her, I don’t know,” Bloomberg said at the jobs meeting. “We’ve had many, too many, unwed births in this country. It would be much better if these young girls didn’t get pregnant.”

Teva, based in Petach Tikva, Israel, said Dec. 7 it was “disappointed” with the HHS’s decision, and that it would determine its next steps after receiving official notification of the decision.

Denise Bradley, a spokeswoman for the company, declined to comment. The company’s American depositary receipts increased 1.1 percent to $40.66 at 4 p.m. in New York.

Teva’s product reduces pregnancy risk if taken within three days of sex. As a result of Sebelius’s order, the pill will continue to be kept behind pharmacy counters and sold without prescription only to women at least 17 years old. Younger girls may obtain the drug with a doctor’s order.

The mayor is founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.