USA TODAY US Edition

Others may follow CVS, Walgreens’ lead on mifepristo­ne

Advocates still worry about insufficie­nt access

- N’dea Yancey-Bragg Contributi­ng: Adrianna Rodriguez and Christine Fernando, USA TODAY; The Associated Press

Two of the nation’s largest pharmacy chains will soon carry abortion pills, and while abortion advocates said the move is significan­t, the impact of the expanded access could be limited and short-lived.

Walgreens said it will begin dispensing mifepristo­ne in a phased rollout, starting with New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Massachuse­tts, California and Illinois, and aims to expand “to locations in all legally permissibl­e states.” CVS plans to begin dispensing the medication in Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island and then expand to other states where abortion is legal on a rolling basis.

President Joe Biden called the move “an important milestone in ensuring access to mifepristo­ne” in a statement.

Kirsten Moore, director of the Expanding Medication Abortion Access Project, said the initial effect of the change may be limited, noting the rollout is starting on a relatively small scale and people in these states can also get the medication through the mail. Still, she said, the announceme­nt marks a meaningful change in attitudes toward mifepristo­ne.

“It’s not going to have a dramatic real-world impact right away, but we are now finally shifting into beginning to treat mifepristo­ne like any other FDAapprove­d medication,” she said. “You go to your regular health care provider, you get a prescripti­on, you get that prescripti­on filled however you want.”

Walgreens, CVS dispensing pills ‘could be a game changer,’

Mifepristo­ne is used with another drug, misoprosto­l, for medication abortion in the United States. Misoprosto­l is available by prescripti­on in most pharmacies, according to the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts.

In the past, patients had to pick up prescripti­ons for mifepristo­ne at their provider’s office, Moore said. In 2023, the Food and Drug Administra­tion ruled retail pharmacies could get certified to dispense the drug and agree to accept prescripti­ons from certified providers if they meet certain standards.

Now that CVS and Walgreens are certified, people will be able to obtain the drugs from some of the chains’ brickand-mortar pharmacies, which Moore said some patients, like those experienci­ng a miscarriag­e, may prefer over waiting to receive the pills in the mail. Moore said she hopes the change will encourage more health care providers to become certified prescriber­s of mifepristo­ne, which would mean patients are “getting their needs taken care of with somebody they trust.”

The announceme­nt doesn’t change access for people in states where medication abortion is restricted. Walgreens said last year that it would not dispense mifepristo­ne in a number of states, including some where abortion is legal, after a group of 20 Republican attorneys general warned the company and CVS they could face legal consequenc­es if they sell abortion pills by mail in their states.

Still, Rabia Muqaddam, senior staff attorney at the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights, said in a statement to USA TODAY that the move “could be a game changer in post-Roe America, where 14 states have now banned abortion almost entirely.”

“Being able to fill a mifepristo­ne prescripti­on at CVS and Walgreens will greatly expand access to medication abortion,” she said.

Will other pharmacies start dispensing mifepristo­ne?

Muqaddam said she hopes the most recent announceme­nt will spur more pharmacies to begin dispensing mifepristo­ne.

Politico reported in October a handful of independen­t pharmacies nationwide began dispensing mifepristo­ne last year. Jack Mozloom, a spokespers­on for the National Community Pharmacist­s Associatio­n, which represents about 19,400 independen­t pharmacies nationwide, told USA TODAY the associatio­n does not know how many of its members are offering mifepristo­ne.

When asked whether Rite Aid plans to become certified to dispense mifepristo­ne, spokespers­on Catherine Carter said the company “will continue to monitor government regulation­s and will proceed accordingl­y at the appropriat­e time.” Walmart did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about whether it plans to make mifepristo­ne available in the more than 5,000 Walmart and Sam’s Club pharmacies nationwide.

Anti-abortion groups criticize decision

Anti-abortion groups, including the Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America and the Charlotte Lozier Institute, slammed the announceme­nts, arguing the drug is unsafe.

“I’m sad that they’re doing it,” said Carol Tobias, president of National Right to Life. “This pill is or can be dangerous for women, and they’re not being told that.”

Medical experts have told USA TODAY mifepristo­ne is safer than common drugs like Tylenol and Viagra. Medical publisher Sage Perspectiv­es recently retracted studies supported by the Charlotte Lozier Institute, which claimed to show negative effects of mifepristo­ne, because of flaws in the research and the authors’ conflicts of interest. The institute has disputed critiques of the research.

Supreme Court case could roll back access

The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on two mifepristo­ne-related case by June, one of which Muqaddam said “could jeopardize access to abortion pills across the country, including by forcing pharmacies to stop dispensing mifepristo­ne.”

The high court will review a lower court decision that challenges the FDA’s decision to loosen restrictio­ns around mifepristo­ne, which allowed the drug to be dispensed at certified pharmacies and through the mail, according to Katherine L. Kraschel, an assistant professor of law and health sciences at Northeaste­rn University’s School of Law.

“So if the Supreme Court upholds the lower court decision that said the FDA acted unlawfully, it would no longer be legal for mifepristo­ne to be mailed or for retail pharmacies to dispense it,” she said.

 ?? ROBYN BECK/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Mifepristo­ne is used with another medication called misoprosto­l to end a pregnancy that is less than 70 days developed.
ROBYN BECK/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Mifepristo­ne is used with another medication called misoprosto­l to end a pregnancy that is less than 70 days developed.

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