South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Doctors wary as abortion pills draw interest

Experts urge caution as some may use medication­s long past the time they are considered safe

- By Cindy Krischer Goodman South Florida Sun Sentinel

A generation ago, women desperate for abortion might have used a coat hanger, but in contempora­ry Florida, they are likely to turn to pills.

Pills that induce cramping and bleeding to empty the uterus — known as medication abortion — are legal in the state up until the 11th week of pregnancy.

But now that Florida has banned abortion after 15 weeks, women who want to end a pregnancy in their second trimester and don’t have the resources to travel may turn to these medication­s long past the time they are considered safe.

“There are a lot of risks in taking the pills when you are far along,” said Dr. Daniel Sacks, an OB-GYN in West Palm Beach. “Women could run into all kinds of complicati­ons from a pregnancy that fails to abort completely.”

Whether through medication or surgical abortion, about 2,700 women this year have legally terminated their pregnancie­s in Florida during the second trimester. That option no longer exists in the state as of July 1. Florida’s new abortion law bans abortion after 15 weeks with exceptions only to save a woman’s life or if an abnormalit­y of a fetus is fatal.

Sacks said women in the second trimester easily can become desperate for options. That’s when they learn of serious genetic or physical abnormalit­ies in the fetus — diagnoses such as spina bifida, Down’s Syndrome, cardiac defects or missing body parts. “These are abnormalit­ies that are not deadly but they are devastatin­g.”

Using medication to induce an abortion has become an increasing­ly popular option in early pregnancy. In 2020, 54% of abortions in the U.S. were done with pills and less than 1 percent of women

reported having significan­t complicati­ons, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

In Florida, only physicians can prescribe the two-part treatment: The first pill — mifepristo­ne—hastobetak­en in person in a clinic or hospital, and the second medication — misoprosto­l — can be taken at home. Most clinics require that patients schedule a follow-up appointmen­t two weeks later to ensure the abortion is complete.

During the pandemic, the FDA changed some of its regulation­s to allow abortion pills to be prescribed via telehealth appointmen­ts and sent in the mail.

Florida law doesn’t ban telehealth prescripti­ons outright, however, the requiremen­t of a face-to-face meeting with a doctor to get a prescripti­on means that method isn’t an option.

But there is concern that women will find a way.

Among the services in the news: Aid Access, a telemedici­ne service in Europe, refers patients to an Austrian physician outside U.S. legal jurisdicti­on, who prescribes them. The medication­s are then packaged by an India-based pharmacy and delivered to the patient within one to two weeks.

In addition, some women already are having friends mail abortion pills across state lines, according to numerous news reports.

Dr. Sacks points out that medication abortion is considered safer than some techniques desperate women resorted to decades ago. However, in the second trimester, the fetus and placenta are bigger and the odds of complicati­ons from the pills forcing a miscarriag­e at home rise.

“The pills could work or they could lead to hemorrhagi­ng or infection or even death,” Sacks said.

The Atlantic reported that since 2000, more than 60 women have been prosecuted for self-managed abortions or induced miscarriag­e, but the charges were eventually dropped, lessened, or overturned by a judge on appeal.

Orlando perinatolo­gist Dr. Cole Greves, chair-elect for his district for the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, said he is concerned about Florida women resorting to unsupervis­ed medication abortions in the later stages of pregnancy.

“When you restrict access to reproducti­ve care, it opens the potential for people to find alternativ­e methods that are illegal or less safe,” he said.

Greves, who specialize­s in treating complex prenatal disorders, said 90% of his patients are more than 15 weeks pregnant when they get a diagnosis. They want to know all their options, he said.

With Florida’s new law, he believes pregnant women will become more proactive about doing genetic testing earlier, and doctors such as him will try to accommodat­e patients before they reach 15 weeks. Yet, he suspects there will be some patients who are too late and will try to self-manage their abortion with pills. “I hope that won’t be the case.”

 ?? FILE ?? Mifepristo­ne and Misoprosto­l, the two drugs used in a medication abortion, are seen at the Women’s Reproducti­ve Clinic, which provides legal medication abortion services, in Santa Teresa, N.M.
FILE Mifepristo­ne and Misoprosto­l, the two drugs used in a medication abortion, are seen at the Women’s Reproducti­ve Clinic, which provides legal medication abortion services, in Santa Teresa, N.M.

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