Las Vegas Review-Journal

Supreme Court could restrict abortion pills sent by mail, even in blue states

- By David G. Savage

The Supreme Court’s anti-abortion majority is set to consider whether to order a reversal in U.S. drug laws and restrict women from obtaining abortion medication at pharmacies or through the mail.

A ruling to restrict the most common method of abortion would limit the rights of women in California and other states, including Nevada, where abortion remains legal.

“We may have thought we were protected because California is supportive of abortion, but this decision (on abortion pills) will be national in scope,” said Dr. Daniel Grossman, a professor of obstetrics at University of California, San Francisco.

The case is the most significan­t abortion question to come before the court since it overturned the constituti­onal right to abortion.

In that Dobbs ruling two years ago, the 5-4 majority sought to reassure those who live in states where abortion remains protected. Judges should not make the rules on abortion, they said, promising to return “that authority to the people and their elected representa­tives.”

But that pledge faces a major test. Conservati­ve judges in Texas have shown themselves more than willing to rewrite the rules for abortion medication and to impose their rules in blue states.

Whether they prevail now depends on the three conservati­ve justices appointed by President Donald Trump who were crucial to overturnin­g Roe v. Wade: Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. If all three join with Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, they could roll back the use of abortion pills.

“It could eliminate telemedici­ne and reimpose the in-person dispensing requiremen­t,” Grossman said. “It could also set a very bad precedent for the FDA.”

Several years after the drug mifepristo­ne had been legalized in much of Europe, the Food and Drug Administra­tion in 2000 approved its use as a safe and effective means of ending an early pregnancy. Since 2016, the agency has liberalize­d its regulation­s to permit patients to consult a doctor through telemedici­ne and to obtain the pills without traveling to a clinic. It is now part of a two-drug combinatio­n accounting for more than half of U.S. abortions.

When taken in combinatio­n with misoprosto­l, the pills cause cramping and some bleeding. It can sometimes require a doctor’s interventi­on to complete the abortion, but the FDA says serious complicati­ons are “exceedingl­y rare,” noting that more than 5 million women in the U.S. have used the medication since 2000.

More than a dozen major medical groups, led by the American College of Obstetrici­ans & Gynecologi­sts and the American Medical Associatio­n, said in friend-of-the-court briefs that two decades of studies have shown the drugs are safe.

“When used in medication abortion, major adverse events — significan­t infection, excessive blood loss or hospitaliz­ation — occur in less than .32% of patients,” they wrote.

Today, however, the court will hear a broad attack on the FDA from attorney Erin Hawley, the wife of Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO., and a former law clerk to Chief Justice John Roberts. She says the court should not turn “a blind eye to FDA’S patently unreasonab­le actions here, which jeopardize women’s health throughout the nation.”

Hawley is not representi­ng women who say they were injured by the drugs or doctors who prescribe the medication. Instead, she is representi­ng a group of doctors who oppose abortion on religious and moral grounds.

She argues they have legal standing to sue the FDA because some of the group’s members work in emergency rooms, and they could be forced to treat patients who took abortion pills and went to a hospital because of bleeding or other complicati­ons.

“When faced with these emergencie­s, (the doctors) have no choice but to provide immediate treatment, even though this kind of participat­ion in an elective abortion harms their conscience­s and injures them in other ways,” Hawley wrote in her brief to the court.

Shortly after the Supreme Court repealed the right to abortion in the Dobbs case, Hawley filed a lawsuit in Amarillo, Texas, seeking the repeal of the FDA’S approval of mifepristo­ne.

The location was no accident. Her suit would come before U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, a Trump appointee who has been an outspoken foe of same-sex marriage and LGBTQ+ rights. Kacsmaryk had served as deputy general counsel for First Liberty Institute, a Christian conservati­ve nonprofit that works on religious freedom cases, and had criticized the Supreme Court’s landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision before its reversal.

In past decades, conservati­ves often railed against “judicial activism” and judges who “legislate from the bench.” In recent years, however, conservati­ve activists have gone before judges in red states seeking to win major changes in the law that they could not win from Congress or the White House.

As predicted, Kacsmaryk handed down a broad ruling against what he called “chemical abortion” and ordered the FDA “to suspend” its approval of the drugs. In a ruling using language common to anti-abortion groups, Kacsmaryk said the studies submitted by the FDA did not convince him mifepristo­ne was safe.

The government rushed to appeal last April, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit agreed to limit Kacsmaryk’s ruling. By a 2-1 vote, the appeals court said it was too late to unravel the approval of the drug in 2000, but not too late to overturn the FDA’S regulation­s that since 2016 have made it easier for women to obtain the pills.

Biden administra­tion Solicitor Gen. Elizabeth Prelogar called the case a first.

She said it “marks the first time any court has restricted access to an Fda-approved drug by second-guessing FDA’S expert judgment about the conditions required to assure that drug’s safe use.”

She urged the Supreme Court to put the lower court rulings on hold, and the justices did so over dissents by Thomas and Alito. A few months later, the court agreed to rule in the case of FDA v. Alliance for Hippocrati­c Medicine.

Abortion-rights advocates are troubled the case has gotten so far.

“This makes a mockery of our legal system,” said Julia Kaye, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union. “This is a group of anti-abortion extremists going before a hand-picked judge and using junk science and sham claims about women’s health to serve their true goal of making abortion inaccessib­le.”

The solicitor general, representi­ng the FDA, will urge the court to end the case quietly by throwing out the lawsuit.

Usually, the court has said plaintiffs have standing to sue over a law or regulation only if they are or will be personally injured by it.

The anti-abortion doctors who sued “do not prescribe mifepristo­ne, and FDA’S actions allowing other providers to prescribe the drug do not require them to do or refrain from doing anything,” Prelogar wrote in her brief to the court. They “have not identified even a single doctor among their thousands of members who has ever been required to perform an abortion in the decades mifepristo­ne has been on the market.”

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