Gynopedia needs your support! Please consider contributing content, translating a page, or making a donation today. With your support, we can sustain and expand the website. Gynopedia has no corporate sponsors or advertisers. Your support is crucial and deeply appreciated.

Translations:Casablanca/18/en: Difference between revisions

From Gynopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Importing a new version from external source)
(No difference)

Revision as of 17:11, 8 March 2017

Information about message (contribute)
This message has no documentation. If you know where or how this message is used, you can help other translators by adding documentation to this message.
Message definition (Casablanca)
In the last few years, emergency contraception (the morning after pill) has become commercialized in Morocco.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_contraceptive_availability_by_country Emergency contraceptive availability by country]</ref> You can buy it at pharmacies without a prescription, according to locals. Technically, you may be required to have a prescription, according to Moroccan law,<ref>[http://www.cecinfo.org/country-by-country-information/status-availability-database/countries/morocco/ EC Status and Availability: Morocco]</ref> but this doesn't seem to be widely enforced. There are stories of many pharmacists, some of whom may even appear "religious," selling emergency contraception to locals without judgment, questioning or shaming.

In the last few years, emergency contraception (the morning after pill) has become commercialized in Morocco.[1] You can buy it at pharmacies without a prescription, according to locals. Technically, you may be required to have a prescription, according to Moroccan law,[2] but this doesn't seem to be widely enforced. There are stories of many pharmacists, some of whom may even appear "religious," selling emergency contraception to locals without judgment, questioning or shaming.