At Wisp, which offers two types of emergency contraception online, sales of those medications went up about 1,000% in just one day after Tuesday’s election.
“We are seeing women actually stockpile emergency contraception pills,” Cepak said.
“When you attack one piece of reproductive health care, it really has a ripple effect,” Friedrich-Karnik said.
“People who need abortion care often also at some point need contraception, and people who need contraception might eventually need maternal health care,” she said.
“People’s lives are fluid like that, and this care is fluid, and you can’t attack one piece of reproductive health care without really impacting the whole range of care that people need.”
Persons:
Donald Trump, Trump, Monica Cepak, “, ” Cepak, ”, Cynthia Plotch, it’s, ” Plotch, That’s what’s, It’s, ’ ”, Clayton Alfonso, ‘ I’ve, ’ ” Alfonso, Court’s Dobbs, Roe, Wade, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, Amy Friedrich, Karnik, ” Friedrich
Organizations:
CNN —, “, Winx, Duke Health, American College of Obstetricians, Trump, Heritage Foundation, Republican, CNN, CNN Health, Guttmacher Institute
Locations:
United States, North Carolina