The Korea Times

Use of abortion pill grows in US, despite threat of new restrictio­ns

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WASHINGTON (AFP) — The ratio of abortions carried out with medication rose to 63 percent between 2020 and 2023 in the United States, according to analysis published ahead of a Supreme Court hearing on restrictin­g access to the pills.

The research made public Tuesday by the Guttmacher Institute, which campaigns for abortion rights, said that medication accounted for 63 percent of all U.S. abortions last year — an increase from 53 percent in 2020.

The use of medication — rather than surgical procedures — to terminate pregnancy has risen steadily since the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) approved the abortion drug mifepristo­ne in the United States in 2000, the Guttmacher Institute said.

This week the Supreme Court will hear arguments to reduce access to mifepristo­ne, which is one of the most common types of abortion medication and can be obtained by patients via mail.

The hearing comes after a Louisiana appeals court ruled in August in a case brought by anti-abortion groups against the FDA that mail-order access to the drug should be banned and it should instead only be administer­ed by a doctor.

The ruling, which was suspended pending the Supreme Court hearing on March 26, also reduced the legal time limit to use mifepristo­ne from within 10 to seven weeks of pregnancy.

The Guttmacher Institute said the Supreme Court “will have to decide whether to ignore the FDA and reimpose unnecessar­y barriers to access or to respect the scientific evidence that mifepristo­ne is safe and effective.”

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