San Diego Union-Tribune

ABORTION PILLS LIKELY TO BECOME NEXT FOCUS OF BATTLE

- BY PAM BELLUCK & SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

If the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, the legal and culture wars over abortion that have consumed the United States for decades would increasing­ly shift to a new front: the use of abortion pills.

Medication abortion — a two-drug combinatio­n that can be taken at home or in any location and is authorized for use in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy — has become more and more prevalent and now accounts for more than half of recent abortions in the United States. If the federal guarantee of abortion rights disappears, medication abortion would likely become an even more sought-after method for terminatin­g a pregnancy — and the focus of battles between states that ban abortion and those that continue to allow it.

“Given that most abortions

are early and medication abortion is harder to trace and already kind of becoming the majority or preferred method, it’s going to be a big deal,” said Mary Ziegler, a legal scholar who has written widely on abortion. “It’s going to generate a lot of forthcomin­g legal conflicts because it’s just going to be a way that state borders are going to become less relevant.”

About half the states are expected to quickly make all methods of abortion illegal if the justices’ decision in a Mississipp­i case resembles a draft opinion leaked this week that would nullify the 1973 ruling that legalized abortion. In Louisiana, a legislativ­e committee this week advanced a bill that would allow homicide charges to be brought against people who get abortions or perform them.

Other states would likely continue to allow abortion, and several are already taking steps to accommodat­e patients from the states where abortion may be outlawed.

Medication abortion is less expensive and less invasive than surgical abortions. In December, the Food and Drug Administra­tion made access to it significan­tly easier by lifting the requiremen­t that patients obtain the first of the two pills, mifepristo­ne, by visiting an authorized clinic or doctor in person. Now, patients can have a

consultati­on with a physician via video or phone or by filling out online forms, and then receive the pills by mail.

But many conservati­ve states have already begun passing laws to restrict medication abortion, including banning it earlier than 10 weeks’ gestation and requiring patients to visit providers in person despite FDA rules. Nineteen states ban the use of telemedici­ne for abortion. This year, Americans United for Life, an anti-abortion advocacy group, listed laws against medication abortion as first among the organizati­on’s “pressing priorities” for 2022.

“In the last year, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas have enacted state-level safeguards to stop mail-order abortion drugs, and the Tennessee Legislatur­e recently sent such protection­s

to Gov. Bill Lee,” said Mallory Carroll, an official with Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion group. “In addition to creating health and safety standards, states are also increasing requiremen­ts for reporting complicati­ons from abortion drugs. We will be working with allies in additional states to tackle this growing public health threat.”

Residents of states that would quickly ban all abortion methods if Roe were overturned — including Texas, Missouri, Utah and Tennessee — would be legally prohibited from having telemedici­ne abortion consultati­ons from any location in their state, even if the doctor were located in a state with legal abortion. Such patients would have to travel to a state where an online, video or phone consultati­on is legal — the IP address of the computer or phone they were using would identify

where they were located. Then, they would have to receive the pills by mail at an address in a state with legal abortion, even if it were a post office box or a hotel.

Some patients are already doing this because they live in one of the states that ban the use of telemedici­ne for abortion. Some aspects of those laws are unclear, including whether patients who take the pills after returning to their home state are violating their state’s law.

If abortion were outlawed in those states, many more patients would travel to states where it was legal, reproducti­ve health experts said.

Several organizati­ons, including Abortion on Demand and Hey Jane, now arrange telemedici­ne or online consultati­ons and mail pills from one of two mail-order pharmacies that are currently authorized by the two mifepristo­ne manufactur­ers to dispense that medication.

But opponents of abortion and states that outlaw abortion are likely to try to challenge or curtail the ability of patients to cross state lines to get the pills, legal experts said. There may be attempts by states that ban abortion to prosecute doctors and other health providers in states where abortion is legal, for example, or to try to block organizati­ons or funds that provide financial help for patients to travel to other states, Ziegler said.

States that support abortion rights are mobilizing to block such efforts.

Legislatio­n in California would provide financial assistance to patients traveling from other states to obtain abortions and increase the number of abortion providers. Connecticu­t just passed a bill that would prevent abortion providers from being extradited to other states, bar Connecticu­t authoritie­s from cooperatin­g with abortion investigat­ions from a patient’s home state and allow Connecticu­t residents who are sued under another state’s abortion provision to countersue.

Early in the pandemic, medical groups filed a lawsuit asking the FDA to lift its requiremen­t that mifepristo­ne, which blocks a hormone crucial to the continuati­on of a pregnancy, be dispensed to patients in person at a clinic or doctor’s office. Citing years of data showing that medication abortion is safe, the medical groups said that patients faced a greater risk of being infected with the coronaviru­s if they had to visit clinics to obtain mifepristo­ne.

For portions of the pandemic, the FDA temporaril­y lifted the in-person requiremen­t, then permanentl­y removed it in December. In addition, the agency said pharmacies could begin dispensing mifepristo­ne if they met certain qualificat­ions. The agency is in the process of hammering out those qualificat­ions with the two manufactur­ers of the drug, and reproducti­ve health organizati­ons said that some national retail pharmacy chains have expressed interest in being able to dispense the medication in some states, at least by mail.

The second medication, misoprosto­l, which causes contractio­ns similar to those of a miscarriag­e and is taken up to 48 hours later, has long been available for a variety of uses with a typical prescripti­on.

A senior Biden administra­tion official said this week that officials are looking for further steps the administra­tion can take to increase access to all types of abortion, including the pill method. The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the leaked Supreme Court decision, said President Joe Biden directed his team “at every aspect in every creative way, every aspect of federal law, to try to do all that’s possible” to protect abortion rights.

As part of that effort, Biden’s secretary of health and human services, Xavier Becerra, said in testimony before the Senate on Wednesday that he has establishe­d a reproducti­ve health care task force.

But there are tight limits on what the administra­tion can do without action from Congress. The long-standing Hyde Amendment, which prevents taxpayer dollars from being used to terminate pregnancy, bans the use of federal funds to pay for abortion, including through the Medicaid program, except in cases of rape, incest or life endangerme­nt.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON AP ?? Medication abortion may become the focus of battles among states that ban abortion and those that don’t.
JEFF ROBERSON AP Medication abortion may become the focus of battles among states that ban abortion and those that don’t.

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