US FDA says abortion pills can be sent by mail - Mail-in voting is a human right, and so is Mail-in abortion!

The US Food and Drug Administration announced Thursday that it is lifting a requirement that patients seeking medication abortion had to pick up the medication in-person, instead allowing pills to be sent by mail.

The move comes as the Supreme Court is poised to undo its abortion rights precedent.

Relaxing the federal restrictions on medication abortion is one thing that the Biden administration could do to mitigate the fallout from a Roe v. Wade reversal, but red states are already on the march to counteract what the federal government has opted to do.

"The FDA's decision eliminating its unnecessary in-person requirement did not come a moment too soon," ACLU attorney Julia Kaye said in a statement after the FDA's decision was announced.

Medication abortion, in which a pregnancy is ended in a two-pill process, has become a prevalent approach to terminating a pregnancy. Both sides of the issue see it as the next frontier in the fight over abortion access, as they wait to see how the Supreme Court decides a Mississippi case where the justices are reexamining the precedent laid out by 1973's Roe v. Wade decision.

"This question about abortion inducing-drugs is really kind of the next phase of the fight over abortion," said John Seago, the legislative director of Texas Right to Life.

"This year -- it was absolutely a prelude," said Elizabeth Nash, a senior state issues manager at The Guttmacher Institute, which favors abortion rights. "In the past couple years, before 2021, we barely saw anything moving on medication abortion," but by her count, bills to restrict access to the method have been introduced in 16 states this year.



Battle lines are drawn around medication abortion​



The FDA first approved the drug mifepristone -- when coupled with the drug misoprostol -- for abortion use in 2000. The introduction of medication did not immediately revolutionize access to abortion the way some reproductive rights advocates had hoped. But use of the method has steadily grown and it now makes up more than half of the abortions that occur before nine weeks into pregnancy, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Over time, the federal government has tweaked some of the federal rules around medication abortion use, but abortion rights proponents contend that the FDA was not keeping pace with what they say evolving science was showing about the safety of the method.

The coronavirus outbreak and how the pandemic expanded the use of telehealth only exacerbated those concerns among abortion rights advocates, who obtained a court order last year requiring the FDA to temporarily lift restrictions that prohibited abortion seekers from obtaining the pills by mail. In April, the Biden administration voluntarily lifted the prohibition for the duration of the pandemic, while indicating in a separate case that it was conducting a full review of the regulations.

"Covid just gave us this kind of natural experiment to demonstrate that no, in fact, there is no medically justifiable reason to require patients to come into a clinic and pick up a pill that they are going to turn around and take at home," said Kristen Moore, the director of the Expanding Medication Abortion Access Project.

Major medical groups like the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have backed the safety of medication abortion, and ACOG is among the organizations in favor of relaxing the regulations.

While the FDA is permanently ending the in-person pick-up requirement for the pills, it is retaining other regulations that reproductive rights advocates had argued should be lifted.

The FDA is keeping a requirement that abortion patients sign an additional form for a medication abortion. It is also continuing to require that clinicians pre-register with a manufacturer of the drug before they can prescribe it.

Kaye, of the ACLU, said in her statement Thursday that the FDA's decision was "critical progress" but "far from complete."

Among abortion foes, momentum toward enshrining medication abortion restrictions at the state level had already been growing, according to Sue Swayze Liebel, state policy director for the anti-abortion group Susan B. Anthony List. The April move by the Biden administration "really led people to pay attention," she said.

"This has kind of snuck up on the state legislators," Liebel said. "They're wise to update their laws anyway to include this new frontier -- let's say -- this pharmaceutical approach, as opposed to the surgical approach, which is what most state laws are based on."



A focus while waiting for action in a blockbuster Supreme Court case​



The Supreme Court's recent signals on abortion rights have only intensified the focus on medication abortion. The court in early December heard a challenge to Mississippi's 15-week abortion ban, where a majority of the justices suggested they were willing to rethink -- and perhaps fully reverse -- the court precedent under Roe that guarantees a right to abortion nationwide.

The Supreme Court also left a Texas law in place last week that bans abortion at around six weeks into pregnancy.

Already, the hurdles one faces to an abortion depend on where one lives, and a loosening of the FDA's regulations will be most impactful in the blue states that aren't seeking to crack down on medication abortion.

Nineteen states already have prohibitions that effectively ban the use of telemedicine for medication abortion, undermining whatever the FDA stands to do.

Still, relaxing the federal regulations could have some effect in maintaining access in the face of a Supreme Court ruling that guts abortion rights. If conservative-led states are allowed to fully prohibit abortion, it is likely that abortion seekers -- particularly in the South and Midwest -- will have to drive hundreds of miles to reach their nearest clinics. That in turn is predicted to create a surge of out-of-state patients in parts of the country that remain friendly toward abortion rights, extending wait times to obtain the surgical procedure by several days or even weeks.

Making medication abortion more accessible creates more "flexibilities" for those seeking abortion in states that maintain access to the procedure, Moore said. "So the people who really need to see somebody who can do a procedure can do that."

Illustrative is the fallout from Texas' six-week ban. Waits for abortion appointments in neighboring states stretch as long as six weeks, due to the flood of Texas patients, as Kaye, the ACLU attorney, pointed out in an interview with CNN earlier this week.

"Eliminating restrictions would increase the number of medication abortion providers and the options for care in states like New Mexico and Colorado, which could enable patients from those states, as well as from neighboring states, to get care earlier in pregnancy," she said.

Article
 
  • Informative
Reactions: SCSI
Some local S. American feminists promote the use of these pills as a "protest" against abortion bans, saying that women have to do it anyway. They often say how and where to buy it. I've read at least three different doctors from different countries saying that women get to ER with several bleeding because of them.

But they do it because they care about women, right?
 
On the one hand, other pulls can be sent through the mail, so if the pills are available at all then I guess consistency makes sense.

On the other hand, I feel concern for if anything less than a personal handoff makes it easier for anyone other than the final user to intercept the pills. This kind of feels like the kind of thing where really bad things can happen if these get misplaced.

On the gripping hand, I think in person pharmacies release medications to relatives anyways so idk maybe the scrutiny isn't very high as is.
 
1. People should just swamp the system with requests for pills so there are none left for actual child murderers.
2. So can I get my vaxx in the mail and be trusted to apply it to myself?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chongqing
I understand why you might not want to pick it up from the pharmacy. But I'm not sure if this sort of thing should be sent by mail.

On the one hand, other pulls can be sent through the mail, so if the pills are available at all then I guess consistency makes sense.

On the other hand, I feel concern for if anything less than a personal handoff makes it easier for anyone other than the final user to intercept the pills. This kind of feels like the kind of thing where really bad things can happen if these get misplaced.

On the gripping hand, I think in person pharmacies release medications to relatives anyways so idk maybe the scrutiny isn't very high as is.

If you are doing it this way to prevent an abusive spouse or family member from finding out and they get that package it might be even worse.

With the situation in Texas I wonder if a black market might be created from this. Imagine ordering this from some sketchy online pharmacy and getting God knows what.
 
1. People should just swamp the system with requests for pills so there are none left for actual child murderers.
2. So can I get my vaxx in the mail and be trusted to apply it to myself?
Schizo.
I understand why you might not want to pick it up from the pharmacy. But I'm not sure if this sort of thing should be sent by mail.



If you are doing it this way to prevent an abusive spouse or family member from finding out and they get that package it might be even worse.

With the situation in Texas I wonder if a black market might be created from this. Imagine ordering this from some sketchy online pharmacy and getting God knows what.
You can get any other pill by mail. People are misrepresenting or misunderstanding what's happening here. This isn't saying you can just mail order abortion pills, you will still need a doctor's prescription. This just allows companies like CVS and Walgreen's, which offer prescription delivery, to deliver your medications. It's literally just a convenience thing. I get all of my scripts delivered by CVS.
 
Send a vial of these with a note to your favorite retard saying "I'm sorry your mom couldn't have these mail ordered (however many years old the person is) ago, give this to her as a late apology."
 
I need to kill this baby but having to go to the pharmacy is just too much work. They're forcing me to carry a baby! This is just like Afghanistan!
I mean you can use that for literally anything.

"I want my fucking oxycontin but going to the pharmacy is too much work!"

"I want my prozac so I don't want to kill myself but going to the pharmacy is too much work!"

I have no idea why people get so upset at a convenience measure. Moreover, these weird laws they keep passing to shame women out of abortions don't work, they just make people hate Republicans. It's retarded and counterproductive.
 
Modern day problems require modern day solutions all drugs should be sent by mail
 
Would it be considered murder if the woman who was pregnant unknowingly consumed abortion pills? Like a one night stand where the man wants nothing to do with a child or the woman he fucked OR a wife/gf who found out "her man" got his side ho pregnant? Or someone pulling a "prank" on them?

What about people that are involved with human trafficking? Now, the victims don't even have the possibility to be seen by mandatory reporters.

Will abortion pills effect the water supply like certain types of BC pills?

What if there's severe complications that requires medical attention?

Do you call up one of those online docs and say "yo, I need an abortion" and then they write a script for pills so technically anyone could get abortion pills?
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Fomo Hoire
This is already turning into an abortion sperging thread (I’m still impressed how hot-button this is and how many of us farmers get their moobs in a knot over it). Feels like 2007 all over again…

Article is also needlessly political, linking it to the “impeding” Roe vs Wade overturning (???). I guess we need to build up a culture war distraction because of how “awesome” everything’s going in Brandon’s America…

Mail-order pharmacies have been a reality for decades and in-person pharmacies, as a last-minute deterrent for abortion or any “socially undesirable” Rx, is a waste of time. I doubt an emotionless life-drained pharmacist or pharm tech at a chain store trying to get through a shift with demon customers and BS insurance issues are going to play counselor and show people “the light” (I’m not digging at the pharmacy employees — they’re needed and I could never survive in that type of atmosphere).
 
Back