Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg in the concurring opinion Griswold v. Connecticut (1966) wrote that the language and history of the Ninth Amendment demonstrate that the Framers of the Constitution intended the judiciary to protect certain unwritten liberties with the same zeal that courts must protect those liberties expressly referenced in the Bill of Rights. Unwritten liberties are essentially synonymous for implicit rights. There is no exact number of implicit rights, certainly more than a dozen. For the book about finished Health Care & Obama, Dr Gerald J. Brown MD has copied 36, but not quite all of them, from a listing of such compiled by the Constitution Society, San Pedro San Antonio, TX Some of them copied were Not to be killed; Not to be injured or abused;. To move freely;. To assemble peaceably;. To keep and bear arms;. To assemble in an independent well-disciplined militia; To communicate with the world. The writer makes note that up to date Medical Care has been there unrecognized from the beginning.
Wikipedia explains: The case involved a Connecticut law that prohibited the use of contraceptives. By a vote of 7-2, the Supreme Court invalidated the law on the grounds that it violated the "right to marital privacy"
Although the Bill of Rights does not explicitly mention "privacy," Justice William O. Douglas wrote for the majority that the right was to be found in the "penumbras" and "emanations" of other constitutional protections. Justice Arthur Goldberg wrote a concurring opinion in which he used the Ninth Amendment to defend the Supreme Court's ruling. Justice John Marshall Harlan II wrote a concurring opinion in which he argued that privacy is protected by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Justice Byron White also wrote a concurrence based on the due process clause.