色狐入口

Media: news, articles, & essays

An exam room in a women's health center in Indiana, where abortions are now banned with very limited exceptions.Amid the battle over abortion rights, a failure to agree on how to define abortion

A story on debates over medical terminology and what counts as "pregnancy," "abortion," and "miscarriage," including an interview with Dr. ChoGlueck on the ethical and political stakes of definitions related to contraceptive access:

"Emergency contraceptive pills work by preventing sperm and egg from ever meeting. ... But when the emergency contraceptive pill Plan B was undergoing FDA approval in the 2000s, an anti-abortion science adviser used a fringe interpretation of the scientific evidence to convince the agency to list preventing implantation as one of the drug鈥檚 possible mechanisms of action, said philosopher of science Christopher ChoGlueck from 色狐入口 Tech. That claim remained on Plan B鈥檚 label until 2022. ... But for a small number of people, preventing a fertilized egg from implanting is 'what they would consider murder,' ChoGlueck said. Because of the potentially drastic consequences, [anti-abortionists are] extremely reluctant to accept that emergency contraception does not cause abortion. 'What I would argue is that no amount of evidence is ever going to convince them,' ChoGlueck said."

A woman discussing side effects with her doctor

Reproductive Health Clinicians Can Improve Access to Emergency Contraception

An interview for the Contraceptive Technology Update (Continuing Medical Education platform) with advocates and researchers including Dr. ChoGlueck about how clinicians and providers can improve access to EC in their communities:

"Family planning clinics and OB/GYN offices could keep EC on hand to dispense to patients in need, suggests Chris ChoGlueck, PhD. 'Have it on hand for patients who are sexually active and don鈥檛 want to be pregnant. The whole idea of Plan B is a lot of people don鈥檛 expect to use it,' ChoGlueck explains. 'You don鈥檛 expect a fire in your house, but you keep a fire extinguisher.'"

Illustration of a woman, decorated with contraceptive pills, chained to a man.Masculinity, a barrier to co-responsibility in contraception

An article in the Catalonian magazine Directa by sexologist Mariona Guijarro Ferrer, about Dr. ChoGlueck's research on gender bias in male contraception trials (translated from Catalan): 

"Researcher Christopher ChoGlueck described, in an article published in 2022, the double standards that occur in clinical trials. This phenomenon explains the differential evaluation of the side effects made by the same researchers of male contraceptives, based on gender norms. It is exemplified through the case of the interruption of a clinical trial due to the possibility of causing pain (due to the injection), changes in libido and depression, effects similar to those that have been assumed for decades in the field of 'female contraception."

Photo of Plan B One Step's drug carton

FDA鈥檚 Change to Emergency Contraception Labeling Is Good News for Women

A follow-up interview for the Contraceptive Technology Update (Continuing Medical Education platform) with Dr. ChoGlueck about the FDA's decision in December 2022 to finally revise Plan B's label to remove the scientifically outdated, misinformative claim that it "may also prevent implantation":

"The labeling change means states that enacted personhood laws have no FDA-label or scientific justification for including Plan B in their abortion bans. 'The language on their website says there is no evidence to support saying Plan B has an effect after fertilization,' ChoGlueck says. 'These changes by the FDA remove it from threats from other abortion legislation, so that鈥檚 all very good and is a really important move for increasing access and for reproductive liberty.'"

A woman holding a megaphone and sign saying "I am the post-Roe generation" with a background of birth control pills and another sign reading #DismantleRoe.The Long Campaign to Turn Birth Control Into the New Abortion

The Reveal podcast (UC Berkeley & Mother Jones) about scientific misinformation spreading on TikTok features an interview with Dr. ChoGlueck on how emergency contraception gets wrong conflated with abortion (starting at minute 11:30).

"It's a really interesting case that exemplifies how values influence science judgment. But also how the antiabortion movement has been able to place scientists into very powerful roles to impose their values on everybody." 

Plan B Is at Risk in Post-Roe AmericaAnti-abortion protesters outside the US Supreme Court  Photographer: Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg

This story on Bloomberg includes Dr. ChoGlueck's research on the mechanism of emergency contraception:

"Some of the issues trace back to outdated language in Plan B鈥檚 labeling, which says the drug may prevent 鈥渁ttachment of a fertilized egg to the uterus,鈥 a process known as implantation. ... 'The history of Plan B is kind of a black eye in the face of the FDA,' says Christopher ChoGlueck, an assistant professor of ethics at 色狐入口 Tech whose research focuses on how antiabortion advisers to the agency influenced the drug鈥檚 label in the early 2000s. 'It鈥檚 a really nefarious case of providers and advisers imposing their values on evidence.'"

test

Future of America鈥檚 most popular emergency contraception is complicated by misinformation

This story on CNN and Scientific American includes Dr. ChoGlueck's research on the mechanism of emergency contraception:

"Despite having no scientific evidence to support that claim, the company agreed to list the post-fertilization mechanism on the packaging as a way of getting the application approved. That seemingly innocuous capitulation has paid dividends for abortion opponents, codifying in official government documents a mechanism of action that would be used to blur the line between contraception and abortion, said Christopher ChoGlueck, an assistant professor of ethics at 色狐入口 Tech who has documented the history of emergency contraception."

 

Now Is the Time to Change Label on Emergency Contraceptives

An interview for the Contraceptive Technology Update (Continuing Medical Education platform) with Dr. ChoGlueck about the stakes of Plan B's outdated FDA label:

"There could be a shift toward attacking contraceptives among conservative lawmakers, starting with Plan B. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e easy to go after,鈥 ChoGlueck adds. 鈥淎lso, a lot of states have these conscientious objector laws or religious freedom laws, which often are pretty vague, that say if you have a moral objection to this, you don鈥檛 have to provide it to anybody, and you get to decide what is wrong."

It is critically important to maintain Plan B access in states that ban abortion. Emergency contraception can prevent pregnancy when couples have unprotected sex, or when condoms break. "Plan B is an important part of the contraceptive toolkit, especially with the changes in abortion laws,' ChoGlueck says. "The really scary thing is that, in some ways, Plan B will be the last legal line of defense."

A diagram of two spheres (hypothesis and data) with a label "evidence" bridging the gap between them.

Can science be value-free? The 鈥済ap鈥 argument

If scientists are in the business of facts, is there still space for human values? Like many other scientists-in-training, I used to think of the sciences as ideally free from societal values, such as environmentalism and feminism. But, if values and biases don鈥檛 necessarily result in 鈥渂ad science,鈥 then why do people hold the value-free ideal?

Model of a contraceptive pillHysterical Housewives, Radical Feminists, and The Gendering of Expertise About The Pill

In January 1970, US Senator Gaylord Nelson began collecting testimony from 鈥渢he experts鈥 about oral contraception. Although women contributed to the Nelson hearings as experts and as protesters, sexist gender norms about expertise shaped who was seen as credible and who was thought to have disturbed the proceedings.

A farmer driving a tractor spraying plants.Deceiving with doubt: How industry denies scientific evidence on the dangers of pesticides

The bias of industry-funded research is pervasive and well-documented. Companies regularly use this pro-industry science to cast doubt on research that hurts their bottom line. But how exactly does industry use science to defend their products? What鈥檚 the methodology behind their political strategy?

HPS Logo in script text.Joining science to liberal arts: The many ways of doing history and philosophy of science

As a graduate student in an HPS department, I find myself having to explain what exactly 鈥淗PS鈥 is to friends, family, and strangers. I am met often with blank stares, gaping mouths, and cautious nods.

Profile image of Dr. GarciaSexual science: An interview with Justin Garcia

鈥淥ur sexuality is becoming digital,鈥 notes Dr. Justin Garcia, a leading expert in modern human mating. While new modes of sexuality and romance bring benefits, they also invite ethical questions. Take the phenomenon of 鈥渟exting,鈥 the transmission of sexual images and messages via mobile phone or other electronic media. After discovering that sexts are shared on average with more than 3 friends鈥攁nd at even higher rates by men than women鈥擥arcia and his colleagues wondered: How does consent work when an intimate message can be both unsolicited and then widely shared? How do the risks of non-consensual sharing differ for women versus men?

Closeup image of different types of money and pensThe process of science and politics and the risks to education

(Co-authored with )

Legislation that artificially limits the ability of bright individuals to enter graduate school unjustly falls on the backs of students who are already struggling. In an era where governmental support for science funding is waning, our knowledge of the natural and human has perhaps never been more important. In a similar manner, improved knowledge of the political process can help us to better understand its connection to and impact on the scientific process.

Global map showing the observered change in global surface temperature from 1901-2012What are scientific facts?

Whether it鈥檚 the 鈥渁lternative facts鈥 from politicians or the 鈥渇ake news鈥 from the media, facts are at the fore. While they can鈥檛 agree on much else, politicians, pundits, and the public do agree (mostly) about facts: facts are separate from fictions, they are reliable and authoritative, and, most importantly, they have something to do with (good) science. But, what exactly is a scientific fact?

Image of scientists at a protestScience or politics? Reclaiming climate science for the people

When scientists communicate with the public about politics, they often frame the issue as 鈥渟cience vs. politics.鈥 For instance, some scientists champion speaking truth to power, while others suggest that they stay out of the political fray altogether. Both arguments assume that science and politics are independent and mutually exclusive. Furthermore, they presuppose that science could and should remain politically neutral. I鈥檇 like to discuss why this framing is problematic and how we might instead understand the political role of science.