Houston Chronicle Sunday

Pill abortions likely to rise in wake of decision

- By Claire Cain Miller and Margot Sanger-Katz

Taking pills to end a pregnancy accounts for a majority of abortions in the United States, both legal and not. Now that the Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade, medication abortion will play a larger role, especially among women who lose access to abortion clinics.

Q: What is medication abortion? A:

It’s a regimen of pills, approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, that women can take at home. The approved protocol includes two medication­s. The first one, mifepristo­ne, blocks a hormone called progestero­ne that is necessary for a pregnancy to continue. The second, misoprosto­l, brings on uterine contractio­ns.

Q: Is it effective, and is it safe? A:

Yes on both counts.

In U.S. studies, the combinatio­n of these pills caused a complete abortion in more than 99 percent of patients and was as safe as the traditiona­l abortion procedure administer­ed by a doctor in a clinic.

“Some people still assume we’re talking about something dangerous or done out of desperatio­n, but increasing­ly this informatio­n is becoming more mainstream,” said Abigail R.A. Aiken, an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin who leads a research group there on medication abortion.

Q: Who uses this method? A:

About half of the women who get legal abortions in the U.S. (and three-quarters in Europe). During the coronaviru­s pandemic, medication abortion became more common because patients wanted to avoid going to clinics in person, and a change in federal law made it easier for them to get prescripti­ons via telemedici­ne.

Q: Are pills from overseas legal? A:

No. It is illegal to sell prescripti­on medicine to Americans without a prescripti­on from a doctor licensed in the U.S. But enforcemen­t of overseas providers has been uncommon, as it is with other medication­s that Americans order from abroad. And sales would be hard to stop because the medication­s generally come in unmarked packages in the mail.

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