USA TODAY US Edition

NYC offers abortion pills at no charge

Four public clinics will have free medication

- Christine Fernando

New York City is now offering free abortion pills at public clinics, the first city in the country to do so.

The free pills will be available at four public clinics across the city, Mayor Eric Adams announced Tuesday, just days before the 50th anniversar­y of Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court decision that granted a constituti­onal right to abortion. On Wednesday, a Bronx clinic became the first to offer the pills, and they will be available at clinics in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens by the end of the year.

The city already offers medication abortions at its 11 public hospitals. The new program expands access to the four clinics and provides a way for people to access the procedure for free.

“No other city in the nation or in the world has a public health department that is providing medication abortion,” Adams said. “We are the first.”

The program is funded by a $1.2 million package for sexual health services, the city’s health department said.

Once the medication abortion programs are up and running, the four clinics will be able to provide up to 10,000 medication abortions annually, Ashwin Vasan, the city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene commission­er, said at a Tuesday news conference.

Vasan said the clinics allow scheduled appointmen­ts and walk-ins, and medication abortion care will be “open to anyone,” whether they are from New York City or not. The city also provides abortion care to anyone regardless of immigratio­n status, Vasan said.

Free medication abortions are part of Adams’ vision for a “New York City Women’s Health Agenda,” he said at the news conference Tuesday. The initiative is “aimed at dismantlin­g decades of systemic inequity that have negatively impacted the health of women across the five boroughs,” according to a statement from his office.

Adams cited several examples of inequities in women’s health and said the average maternal mortality rate among Black pregnant people is more than nine times the rate of white pregnant people.

“For too long, health and health care has been centered around men, but that changes today,” Adams said. “We have been standing on the sidelines of women’s health for too long, and I have personally seen firsthand how the health system is letting our women down. It is long overdue that we break taboos and make New York City a model for the future of women’s health care.”

Wendy Stark, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Greater New York, called the program “critical ... to our bodily autonomy and basic human rights.”

“A healthier New York City requires intentiona­l investment­s in reducing health care disparitie­s that systematic­ally disadvanta­ge Black, Latinx and marginaliz­ed communitie­s,” Stark said in a statement.

In a statement, Dr. Herminia Palacio, president and CEO of the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organizati­on that supports abortion rights, applauded the program as a step to “prioritize the health, wellbeing and reproducti­ve autonomy of our women and girls.”

The medication abortion effort is one of several NYC programs launched after Roe v. Wade was overturned.

In March, Adams announced a citywide expansion of doula services, a midwifery initiative and a maternal health services program. In August, he signed the NYC Abortion Rights Act legislativ­e package, strengthen­ing abortion protection­s and paving the way to free medication abortions. And in November, the city launched the Abortion Access Hub, which confidenti­ally connects women seeking abortion care to providers across the city, as well as services for financial support, transporta­tion and lodging.

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