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Irish Times, July 27, 2005
Irish Minister
of Health Says Pill Should Be Option for Pre-teens
Author : Liam Reid
The Tanaiste and Minister for Health Mary Harney
has said the morning-after pill and contraception
should be made available to children as young
as 11 in certain circumstances.
She also said she favoured a liberal regime in
relation to the availability of contraception,
in order to prevent crisis pregnancies among
teenagers.
She stressed, however, that contraception should
only be made available to under-16s in consultation
with their parents.
There was a mixed reaction to the Tanaiste's
comments last night.
Dr Niall O Cleirigh of the Irish College of General
Practitioners said his colleagues had not come
across cases involving 11-year-olds seeking
the morning-after pill, and he would like to
know more about the case mentioned by the Tanaiste.
"I haven't heard of any GP who has,"
he told RTE News last night. "I think
it's quite an extraordinary age and quite an
extraordinary issue to parachute into an area
that is a very, very difficult area for everybody."
Speaking to journalists following the annual
report of the Crisis Pregnancy Agency yesterday
morning, Ms Harney said she was "open
to having a liberal regime as far as the availability
of contraception is concerned because above
all else we want to avoid crisis pregnancies."
She added: "We want to avoid young people
finding themselves, young women as I understand
it, as young as 11, finding themselves in a
crisis pregnancy situation. That is very undesirable."
She said she had been informed by a member of
the Irish Nurses' Organisation who counsels
those with crisis pregnancies and who had dealt
with sexually active girls as young as 11.
"Much and all as we may find that astonishing,
and it is astonishing, I think we have to deal
with the reality, and the consequences of that
mean that we have to promote more widely through
schools and youth clubs and areas where young
people associate, the availability of contraception.
"And we have to make sure that if the
morning-after pill is required, then it is
available to somebody in that age group because
clearly they're under age.
"A doctor can't prescribe to somebody as
young as 11 without parental approval and huge
issues arise in relation to that."
She said that engaging in sexual activity with
somebody under the age of 16 was statutory
rape.
"If it's happening then we need to deal
with the reality, and I'm open to hearing from
experts and counsellors and the agency in relation
to that matter and indeed educators."
Yesterday the Irish Medicines Board, which regulates
the availability of drugs in the State, said
the morning-after pill was not licensed for
use by anybody under the age of 16.
However, a doctor can decide to prescribe an
unlicensed product if he or she believes it
to be in the best interests of a patient, on
a case-by-case basis. Any prescriptions to
under-16s have to be made with the consent
of a parent or guardian, a spokeswoman said.
Dr O Cleirigh said the main issue regarding prescriptions
of the morning-after pill to under-16s related
to cases of teenage girls just under that age
threshold. "I do think you have to take
quite a pragmatic decision there, but again
you must have parental consent in relation
to a girl under the age of 16."
The National Parents Council last night said
sexual activity among 11-year-olds was a "child
protection issue" and sex education had
to be taught in every school.
Hazel Nolan, president of the Union of Secondary
Students of Ireland, said many students found
the level of sex education they received in
school was limited, especially in Catholic
institutions. "In a lot of schools you
are not allowed to show how to use a condom,
and that's a basic necessity. Young people
are going to have sex, and people are going
to have to wake up and think about it . . .
either we provide accurate information, or
students will learn it from TV shows."
<< Irish Times -- 7/27/05 >>
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