The Guardian (USA)

UK-based doctor under investigat­ion over abortion ‘reversal’ medication

- Jessica Glenza

A UK-based doctor is under investigat­ion for offering to prescribe abortion “reversal” medication, an “unproven and experiment­al” treatment promoted by US-based anti-abortion activists.

The doctor allegedly offered to prescribe pessaries to an undercover investigat­or with the advocacy group open Democracy. The undercover investigat­or was connected to the doctor after calling a US-based Christian hotline run by Heartbeat Internatio­nal, a large anti-abortion group.

“UK doctors should not be working with anti-abortion activists to advise and prescribe a treatment that is unproven and dangerous,” said MP Nadia Whittome. She said she was “glad” the GMC was investigat­ing.

“Abortion reversal” is an “unproven and unethical” treatment promoted to women who opt for medication abortions to terminate a pregnancy. Medication abortions are available to people who wish to terminate a pregnancy that is less than 10 weeks along. Crucially, the medication can be taken at home, which has caused its popularity to increase amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

However, since 2014, a California­based doctor has promoted a “treatment” to “reverse” a medication abortion through large doses of progestero­ne, though US-based doctors associatio­ns and OB-GYNs have repeatedly said there is no evidence to show it is safe or effective.

An editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine called the treatment “unproven and experiment­al”, and said it should only be offered, “in the context of clinical research supervised by an institutio­nal review board (IRB)”.

The only high-quality, randomized controlled trial to be conducted on the treatment was halted in 2019 when three women suffered severe hemorrhagi­ng and had to be hospitaliz­ed.

“Women who have medical abortions bleed, but this was not typical medical abortion bleeding,” Dr Mitchell Creinin, a professor of obstetrics-gynecology at the University of California, Davis Health who led and ultimately halted the study, told Self magazine in 2020. “It wasn’t safe for me to expose women to this treatment.”

Neverthele­ss, regulators have al

lowed the treatment to flourish in the US, and state legislator­s have promoted its growth by mandating abortion providers counsel women their abortion can be “reversed” if they change their mind.

One North Dakota law was the subject of a 2019 lawsuit by the American Medical Associatio­n, the largest profession­al organizati­on of doctors in the country, who said it required doctors to, “mislead and misinform their patients with messages that contradict reality and science”.

“This trend is troubling because of the lack of medical evidence demonstrat­ing the safety and efficacy of the treatment,” Dr Daniel Grossman, a professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproducti­ve sciences at the Bixby Center for Reproducti­ve Health at the University of California, San Francisco, wrote in the same Nejm editorial. “Laws promoting it essentiall­y encourage women to participat­e in an unmonitore­d research experiment.”

Additional­ly, a Guardian investigat­ion into the doctor who invented the regime, Dr George Delgado, revealed he continued to use an affiliatio­n with the University of California, San Diego years after his connection with the school had ended, and a year after the university had asked him to stop.

Delgado is the “medical director” of a “pro-life” Catholic-oriented clinic in San Diego. He has also made “hundreds of presentati­ons” to anti-abortion fundraiser­s, a biography on the anti-abortion Charlotte Lozier Institute website said. His paper on the treatment was widely criticized and briefly retracted.

Despite repeated condemnati­ons of profession­al organizati­ons and a lack of viable research, openDemocr­acy investigat­ions have found doctors in at least a dozen countries promoting the “treatment”.

An operator on the Heartbeat Internatio­nal hotline told an investigat­or the group “helps[s] hundreds of women everyday in the UK”. The operator added: “We are like the internatio­nal abortion pill reversal line,” she said.

The General Medical Council, the regulatory body for doctors in the UK, is now investigat­ing the doctor the openDemocr­acy researcher was connected to – Dr Eileen Reilly. A public listing of regulatory actions shows Reilly is now subject to supervisor­y conditions while the GMC considers her case.

Regarding health concerns, openDemocr­acy said its investigat­or was told by Reilly, “At the end of the day, you live in the UK, you’ve got a hospital there and if you were worried about the bleeding, you’d go get help.”

The regulatory tribunal may take no action, impose conditions on a doctor’s ability to practice, or suspend the doctor while the tribunal investigat­es, a GMC website states. A referral to the tribunal alone does not mean the GMC has reached a decision about fitness to practice.

Investigat­ors with openDemocr­acy said they called Reilly for comment ahead of publishing their report, but “she hung up”. Reilly appears to have made comments about medication abortion as recently as February, when she appeared on a video hosted by the UK-based anti-abortion group March for Life UK.

Melissa Upreti, the vice-chair of the United Nations working group on discrimina­tion against women and girls said, “The situation warrants not one but multiple investigat­ions by government bodies, as well as profession­al associatio­ns.

“Women who have been misled and subjected to medically dangerous procedures to supposedly reverse their abortions must be provided with appropriat­e medical assistance, options for legal recourse and reparation­s for the emotional and physical suffering caused to them,” Upreti said. “There can be no doubt that women are the victims here.”

UK doctors should not be working with anti-abortion activists to advise and prescribe a treatment that is unproven and dangerous

MP Nadia Whittome

 ??  ?? Abortion ‘reversal’ is an ‘unproven and unethical’ treatment promoted to women who opt for medication abortions to terminate a pregnancy. Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Reuters
Abortion ‘reversal’ is an ‘unproven and unethical’ treatment promoted to women who opt for medication abortions to terminate a pregnancy. Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Reuters

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