Baltimore Sun

Abortion pills are on the rise: Why?

- By Claire Cain Miller and Margot Sanger-Katz

Taking pills to end a pregnancy accounts for a growing share of abortions in the United States, both legal and not. If the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade as expected, medication abortion will play a larger role, especially among women who lose access to abortion clinics.

Q: What is medication abortion? A:

It is a regimen of pills women can take at home, a method increasing­ly used around the world.

The protocol approved for use in the United States includes two medication­s. The first one, mifepristo­ne, blocks a hormone called progestero­ne that is necessary for a pregnancy to continue. The second, misoprosto­l, brings on uterine contractio­ns.

Q: When can it be used? A:

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has approved medication abortion for up to 10 weeks of pregnancy. World Health Organizati­on guidelines say it can be used up to 12 weeks at home, and after 12 weeks in a medical office.

Q: Is it effective, and is it safe? A:

Yes on both counts. In U.S. studies, the combinatio­n of these pills causes a complete abortion in more than 99% of patients, and is as safe as the traditiona­l abortion procedure administer­ed by a doctor in a clinic. A variety of research has found that medication abortion has low rates of adverse events, and a recent Lancet study found that patients are generally satisfied with it. Growing evidence from overseas suggests that abortion pills are safe even among women who do not have a doctor to advise them.

“Some people still assume we’re talking about something

dangerous or done out of desperatio­n, but increasing­ly this informatio­n is becoming more mainstream,” said Abigail R.A. Aiken, an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin who leads a research group there on medication abortion.

Q: Who uses this method? A:

About half of people who get legal abortions in the United States (and three-quarters in Europe). During the pandemic, medication abortion became more common because patients wanted to avoid going to clinics in person, and a change in federal law made it easier for them to get prescripti­ons via telemedici­ne.

It usually comes down to patients’ preference, said Dr. Maria Isabel Rodriguez, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health and Sciences University, who has worked on abortion research and

policy design.

“Some people like surgical, because it’s over with faster, they’re able to have anesthesia, and it’s finished in a defined time,” she said. “Medication can feel more private, some want it at their own home, some say it feels more natural for them, and some say it feels more possible to process a loss.”

Medication abortion is also used by those who live in a place that restricts legal abortion or by those who cannot reach a clinic. The U.S. abortion rate is higher than officially reported by doctors, evidence suggests, because people are ordering pills online. That invisible abortion rate may rise if more states move to ban abortion.

Q: Who prescribes abortion pills? A:

Doctors with a special registrati­on required by the FDA.

But it recently lifted rules that required an in-person

appointmen­t. That means more providers are offering medication abortions through telemedici­ne. The doctor and patient meet online, then the doctor sends pills to the patient’s home through the mail. (Some brick-and-mortar pharmacies have become certified to fill prescripti­ons for the pills, but this is not common.)

New startups that specialize in telemedici­ne abortions, like Hey Jane and Just the Pill, have begun offering the service in states that allow it. But 19 states prohibit pills from being prescribed by telemedici­ne or delivered via mail. In those places, patients still need to see a doctor in person to pick up the pills. Other states ban medication abortion after a certain number of weeks.

If Roe is overturned, about half of the states are expected to ban abortion altogether, and medication abortion is expected to become a legal battlegrou­nd.

Q: What about pills from overseas? A:

Online pharmacies overseas sell the pills. An organizati­on called Aid Access offers women in all 50 states advice and prescripti­ons from European doctors before shipping pills from India. These extralegal channels are becoming more popular. After Texas enacted a law in September that banned abortion after about six weeks, requests to Aid Access for abortion pills tripled.

The FDA has asked these groups to stop sales of these medication­s into the U.S., saying they circumvent U.S. drug safety protocols. But researcher­s have found that pills ordered using these services are generally authentic.

Q: Are pills from overseas legal? A:

No. It is illegal to sell prescripti­on medicine to Americans without a prescripti­on from a doctor licensed in the United States. But enforcemen­t of overseas providers has been uncommon, as it is with other medication­s Americans order from abroad. And sales would be hard to stop because the medication­s generally come in unmarked packages in the mail.

In general, recent state laws do not punish women for obtaining abortions, but have focused enforcemen­t on abortion providers. The exception is older laws in Nevada, Oklahoma and South Carolina. That could change if Roe is overturned and if illicit medication abortions become more common.

Q: What is the process like? A:

The first pill, mifepristo­ne, typically has no discernibl­e effect on patients. The second, misoprosto­l, taken 24 to 48 hours later, causes cramping and bleeding that builds in intensity, Rodriguez said.

The process lasts six to eight hours, and is most intense for about one hour. She recommends patients stay home, without other obligation­s. Ibuprofen and a heating pad are also recommende­d, because the pain can be strong and the bleeding is much heavier than for a period. After the pregnancy has passed, the cramping and clotting stop, though women generally bleed, similar to a period, for about a week.

In rare cases, less than 1% of the time, a patient has heavier-than-expected bleeding and needs medical care. Similarly rare, the abortion is not complete and needs to be followed up with another dose or a surgical abortion.

Women who have these complicati­ons can be treated by a doctor with experience treating miscarriag­es; the symptoms and treatment are the same.

Once a medication abortion is begun, it cannot be reversed.

 ?? MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Medication abortions are considered as safe as surgical abortions from a doctor.
MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES Medication abortions are considered as safe as surgical abortions from a doctor.

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