The Pink Pill" Documentary Exposes Medical Sexism, Champions Female Libido Treatment

March 15, 2026
The Pink Pill" Documentary Exposes Medical Sexism, Champions Female Libido Treatment
  • A new documentary, The Pink Pill: Sex, Drugs & Who Has Control, centers on bringing Addyi (flibanserin) to market as a treatment for low female libido and frames the broader fight against medical sexism in women’s health.

  • The film argues that medical sexism and insufficient training in women’s sexual health contribute to under-treatment of female sexual dysfunction, urging more funding, research, and cultural change.

  • Through scientific debate, personal narratives, and advocacy tactics, the documentary seeks to educate and mobilize audiences to advance women’s sexual health as a legitimate medical priority.

  • Sprout Pharmaceuticals led advocacy campaigns like Even the Score and conducted extensive safety studies, including driving-impairment research, to address concerns and build support.

  • Cindy Eckert’s ongoing advocacy, campaigns such as Even the Score, physician partnerships, and testimonies from women who used Addyi culminated in FDA approval in 2015 and later corporate developments.

  • The film details efforts such as the Even the Score campaign, driving studies showing no driving impairment, and testimonies from supporters, physicians, and Addyi users.

  • Eckert named the drug Addyi and led the largest clinical trial in women’s health history, enrolling more than 13,000 participants and showing a positive impact on desire.

  • Even with trial success, regulatory and safety concerns persisted, including cautious marketing and ongoing debates about side effects, as the FDA process extended over years.

  • Initial Boehringer Ingelheim trials showed promise, but the FDA rejected Addyi in 2013 over efficacy and safety concerns; Eckert, as a co-creator, then acquired the rights and championed the drug.

  • Valeant’s acquisition and price increases after Addyi’s approval highlighted access barriers, prompting Sprout Pharmaceuticals to sue (case later dropped) and Eckert to repurchase Addyi for $0.

  • The film centers on Cindy Eckert, founder of Sprout Pharmaceuticals, who led the Addyi effort after acquiring rights in 2010 and pursuing FDA approval through vigorous advocacy and research.

  • Treena Orchard emphasizes that the piece supports the documentary’s message: ongoing need to treat women’s sexual health with the same rigor and attention as men’s.

Summary based on 3 sources


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