PlanB0207_256K_20120208104010_0_JPG

PlanB0207_256K_20120208104010_4_JPG

  • More strange news
Mexican boy's eyes gouged out 'to save the world'
Boy's eyes gouged out 'to save world'

A 5-year-old Mexican boy whose eyes were allegedly gouged out …

Cops: Angry NY man poured bleach in nephews' milk
Cops: Man poured bleach in kids' milk

Authorities say an upstate New York man angry over getting …

Video: Burglar befriends dog
Video: Burglar befriends dog

A pair of would-be thieves targeted a home in Delray Beach, …

Thieves victimize unconscious man on NY sidewalk
Thieves victimize unconscious man

A video shows thieves victimizing a man lying passed out at the…

Firefighters help oust tranquilized bear from tree
Firefighters help oust bear from tree

Wildlife officers had to ask firefighters to help them get a …

Advertisement

Pennsylvania vending machine has Plan B

Shippensburg University offers contraceptive pill

Updated: Wednesday, 08 Feb 2012, 2:30 PM CST
Published : Wednesday, 08 Feb 2012, 2:30 PM CST

SHIPPENSBURG, Penn. (NBC/WHAG) - Students at one Pennsylvania college can now buy Plan B contraceptive pills in a vending machine.

Plan B, also known as the morning-after pill, is sold over the counter to anyone older than 17, but at Shippensburg University it's sold in a vending machine.

"I don't think it should be sold on campus," said Cory Amenta, a freshman at Shippensburg. "I do know it's sold in Rite-Aid, and Walmart and CVS. But I don't think it should be on campus, because it's just promoting unsafe sex."

Dr. Roger Serr, vice president of student affairs, said the student association ran a student interest survey on Plan B in 2008.

Some 500 of about 6,500 students participated with overwhelming support.

"So we decided to use a vending machine back in our self-care clinic, which also dispenses some other things as well. And that was a way that we could allow convenience for students. Also, it allowed privacy for students," said Serr.

The vending machine is located in the health center on campus, tucked away at the end of a long, quiet hallway.

Plan B is sold for $25, alongside condoms, pregnancy tests and cough drops.

"I think the issue is there's no fee money in this, and so that if I'm a student who's paying a health fee, and if I'm morally opposed to Plan B, my money is not really involved in this, and that's real key," said Serr.

Annual student health fees cost $150, separate from the cost of Plan B, so the pill is affordable and nurses are available for consultation if desired. Still, some students are still leery.

"To be able to walk up to a vending machine and just get that, get a pill like that, it's just ridiculous," said Cassandra Towsley, a junior.
 

  Report an inappropriate comment.
 
 

 

 


 

Advertisement
Advertisement

Site Tools

Advertisement