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 Abortion Non-Discrimination Act (ANDA)
 Assisted Suicide
 Born-Alive Infants Protection Act
 Child Custody Protection Act/CIANA
 Conscience Protection
 District of Columbia Abortion Funding
 Embryo/Fetal Research
 Federal Employees' Health Benefits (FEHB)
 Fetal Tissue Research
 Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE)
 Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA)
 Health Care Reform
 Human Cloning
 Human Life Amendment
 Hyde Amendment
 Medical Training Non-Discrimination (ACGME)
 Mexico City Policy
 Military Abortion Policy
 Morning-After Pill
 Parental Involvement
 Partial-Birth Abortion
 Prison Abortion Funding
 Project Life and Liberty
 RU-486: Chemically Induced Abortion
 Stem Cell Research
 Terri Schiavo Dies
 Umbilical Cord Blood Banks
 Unborn Victims of Violence Act
 United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)

Morning-After Pill

Morning-after pills are also called “emergency contraceptives” pills (ECPs), but this term clouds over the fact that these pills have both contraceptive and abortifacient effects.

Pro-abortion advocates have been promoting morning-after pills in various ways. They have succeeded in mandating coverage for Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved pills in health plans for federal employees. Conscience protection for institutions remains deficient in relation to this policy. See: Federal Employees Health Benefits. They seek to extend the coverage mandate to all health insurance plans. In 2000, a particularly vitriolic debate on this matter occurred in the District of Columbia City Council. Congress intervened, securing conscience protection for religious beliefs and moral convictions.

Abortion advocates are pushing to require all hospitals to provide morning-after pills for rape victims, but with little or no regard for conscience protection for hospitals and health care personnel. They also seek to establish public education programs promoting morning-after pills. Efforts by pro-life to restrict the distribution of morning-after pills in schools have not been successful. Also see: Parental Notification.

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