'Important to make things more equitable,' says doctor after FDA's abortion pill decision
Record ID:
1705155
'Important to make things more equitable,' says doctor after FDA's abortion pill decision
- Title: 'Important to make things more equitable,' says doctor after FDA's abortion pill decision
- Date: 4th January 2023
- Summary: NEW YORK, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES (JANUARY 4, 2023) (REUTERS) PEOPLE AT DUANE READE /WALGREENS PHARMACY COUNTER PEOPLE AT CVS PHARMACY COUNTER PAN FROM SIGN READING (English): "PHARMACY TO OVER-THE-COUNTER DRUGS" AS WOMAN WALKS BY AT CVS TWO WOMEN WALKING INTO DUANE READE /WALGREENS PHARMACY
- Embargoed: 18th January 2023 18:23
- Keywords: FDA U.S. Food and Drug Administration abortion abortion pill apply for certification medication abortion mifepristone patients retail pharmacies
- Location: VARIOUS
- City: VARIOUS
- Country: US
- Topics: Economic Events,North America
- Reuters ID: LVA001036504012023RP1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will allow retail pharmacies to offer abortion pills in the United States for the first time, the agency said on Tuesday (January 3), even as more states seek to ban medication abortion.
The regulatory change will potentially expand abortion access as President Joe Biden's administration wrestles with how best to protect abortion rights after they were sharply curtailed by the Supreme Court's decision to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade ruling and the state bans that followed.
Pharmacies can start applying for certification to distribute abortion pill mifepristone with one of the two companies that make it, and if successful they will be able to dispense it directly to patients upon receiving a prescription from a certified prescriber.
Abortion rights activists say the pill has a long track record of being safe and effective, with no risk of overdose or addiction. In several countries, including India and Mexico, women can buy them without a prescription to induce abortion.
Abortion bans, some targeting mifepristone, have gone into effect in more than a dozen states since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to terminating pregnancies when it scrapped the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling last year.
Women in those states could potentially travel to other states to obtain medication abortion.
The president of anti-abortion group SBA Pro-Life America, Marjorie Dannenfelser, said the latest FDA move endangers women's safety and the lives of unborn children.
FDA records show a small mortality case number associated with mifepristone.
As of June 2021, there were reports of 26 deaths linked with the pill out of 4.9 million people estimated to have taken it since it was approved in September 2000.
Retail pharmacies will have to weigh whether or not to offer the pill given the political controversy surrounding abortion, and determine where they can do so.
A spokesperson for CVS Health said the drugstore chain owner was reviewing the updated REMS "drug safety program certification requirements for mifepristone to determine the requirements to dispense in states that do not restrict the dispensing of medications prescribed for elective termination of pregnancy."
A spokesperson for Walgreens, one of the largest U.S. pharmacies, said the company was also reviewing the FDA's regulatory change.
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