Op-Ed: Women deserve protection from the harm of mail-order abortion pills

Op-Ed: Women deserve protection from the harm of mail-order abortion pills

Spread the love

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has finally begun reviewing the data on the abortion pill mifepristone’s harms to women. The organization’s interim report could be released as early as this month.

Yet Americans have been awaiting this review since September of last year. In the meantime, women and girls nationwide are suffering a wave of mifepristone-related coercion and abuse.

Their stories are a shocking indictment of both mail-order abortion and mifepristone itself.

Unfortunately, ongoing litigation in court cases involving mail-order mifepristone, likeLouisiana v. FDA, is not moving quickly enough to guarantee timely or strong protections. Until the government takes action to protect citizens and settle the lawsuits, American women deserve to know the risks associated with the abortion pill.

Women should know about Jona Affholder, a young healthcare nurse in Ohio whose boyfriend forced mifepristone pills down her throat after she refused to have an abortion. He prevented Jona from seeking medical help or even leaving the house. Jona’s unborn baby died as a result. Today, Jona lives with the trauma and physical consequences.

Women also deserve to know about Catherine Herring, a Houston woman whose husband spiked her drinks with chemical abortion pills numerous times. Catherine‘s husband allegedly purchased the pills from Mexico – showing how dangerous the unregulated mail-order drug landscape has become.

Rosalie Markezich, a young woman from Louisiana and the plaintiff in Louisiana v. FDA, suffered a similar fate. When Rosalie refused to have an abortion, her boyfriend used her information to purchase mifepristone online from California. Once the pills arrived, Rosalie’s boyfriend coerced her into swallowing them. Rosalie mourned the loss of her child – bleeding and in pain on the bathroom floor.

In Rosalie’s case and others, mail-order abortion incentivized abusers to commit fraud, poison women, and break state pro-life laws in the process.

Jona, Rosalie, and Catherine’s experiences are not unique. Peer-reviewed data shows that 7 out of 10 women with a history of abortion say that their abortions were “inconsistent with their own values and preferences.” One out of four post-abortive women say their abortions were unwanted or coerced. The prevalence of abortion coercion should sound the alarm regarding mail-order abortion drugs, which enable abusers to purchase mifepristone and poison women and girls with impunity.

Mail order abortion pills also circumvent pro-life laws at women’s expense. Jona, Rosalie, Catherine and the many other victims of mifepristone share a common theme: they are proof that without an in-person dispensing requirement for abortion drugs, state pro-life laws are powerless to protect local women and girls from abortion-related coercion.

Despite compounding evidence, however, some American leaders are loathe to act. They defend their hesitancy by saying that mifepristone is “safe as Tylenol” or that the science on it is “settled.”

This is patently untrue. Not only are there no scientifically-appropriate studies comparing abortion drugs to Tylenol, but a recent study found that mifepristone’s “serious adverse event” (SAE) rate is 22 times higher than what the FDA reports.

One in ten women who take mifepristone suffer a serious or life-threatening event within 45 days. And mifepristone taken in the second trimester has an almost 40% failure rate.

These risks are in addition to those women face when they – or their abusers – purchase abortion pills in the mail. Without an in-person doctors visit, women don’t know if they are taking mifepristone with life-threatening complications like ectopic pregnancies. They also may not know if they are past the FDA’s recommended 10-week gestational limit. This is especially dangerous because over 80% of abortion providers send women the pills past the recommended 10-week timeframe.

Just recently, my colleague and board-certified OB/GYN Dr. Christina Francis tried purchasing abortion pills online to see if abortion providers had proper safeguards on the process. She was horrified to discover that she could purchase mifepristone despite telling the provider that she was a minor with a history of ectopic pregnancies and other life-threatening conditions. The site didn’t even require identification.

How is this legal?

Mail-order abortion was illegal until the COVID-19 pandemic. Healthcare providers used to admit the dangers of distributing potentially life-threatening pills without appropriate screenings, like ensuring that the recipient was not a victim of abortion coercion or sex trafficking. The Biden Administration dismissed this longstanding practice to advance a deeply unpopular pro-abortion agenda.

The FDA’s long-awaited review offers hope that American leaders might finally reinstate longstanding protections on dangerous chemical abortion pills – something that 70% of Americans support. It should also incentivize the Department of Justice to settle litigation in Louisiana v. FDA.

For women like Jona, Rosalie and Catherine, this is not just a policy debate. It’s a discouraging reminder that too many American leaders continue allowing blatant medical malpractice to end lives and scar women – either because they are either too apathetic or afraid to confront the crisis.

It’s time for that to change, before any more women experience coercion or harm.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Appeals court dumps $60M baby formula NEC verdict vs Mead Johnson

Appeals court dumps $60M baby formula NEC verdict vs Mead Johnson

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Saying a St. Clair County judge applied an improper legal standard and allowed trial lawyers to bias a jury, an Illinois appeals...
B-52 bomber crashes after takeoff from California base

B-52 bomber crashes after takeoff from California base

By Robert MattesonThe Center Square A U.S. Air Force B-52 Stratofortress crashed shortly after takeoff Monday morning from Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California. Eight people were aboard the...
Kiley maintains lead in California congressional race

Kiley maintains lead in California congressional race

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square With less than a month to go in the vote count, U.S. Rep. Kevin Kiley continues to hold onto the lead in the race for...
Chicago council defers meter sale approval, criticizes Johnson over ‘lack of transparency’

Chicago council defers meter sale approval, criticizes Johnson over ‘lack of transparency’

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicago City Council is torn over a proposal from Mayor Brandon Johnson that would approve a...
Funding, tax questions loom over Obama Center opening

Funding, tax questions loom over Obama Center opening

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Obama Presidential Center is scheduled to open in Chicago on Thursday, but financial questions are looming...
SECURE Data Act offers ‘clear, enforceable’ privacy rules, without the big money lawsuits

SECURE Data Act offers ‘clear, enforceable’ privacy rules, without the big money lawsuits

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Republicans in Congress are attempting to move forward with a proposed new law that would for the first time create national standards...
Illinois Quick Hits: State announces new Medicaid contracts

Illinois Quick Hits: State announces new Medicaid contracts

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services has awarded new HealthChoice Illinois contracts to six Medicaid...
Record tornado numbers impact Illinois economy

Record tornado numbers impact Illinois economy

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – This year will likely be a record year for tornadoes in Illinois, but the financial impact of...
Trump and Iran sign peace deal amid mixed responses from Congress

Trump and Iran sign peace deal amid mixed responses from Congress

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square President Donald Trump’s short-term peace deal with Iran has sparked mixed reactions among U.S. lawmakers, with Republicans projecting cautious optimism and Democrats criticizing the conflict...
Trump throws another curveball at FISA Section 702 reauthorization

Trump throws another curveball at FISA Section 702 reauthorization

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square President Donald Trump has once again complicated Republican leadership’s plans in Congress, demanding Monday that lawmakers attach voter ID legislation to the spy powers reauthorization...
Supreme Court to hear jury limits, disability cases

Supreme Court to hear jury limits, disability cases

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to take up cases on intellectual disability in death sentences and limits on the number of jurors. Justices...
Campaign begins highlighting NYC nonprofit hospital's prioritizing 'woke' ideology

Campaign begins highlighting NYC nonprofit hospital’s prioritizing ‘woke’ ideology

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square Consumer protection organization Consumers’ Research began a campaign Monday highlighting New York City-based nonprofit Mount Sinai Hospital's prioritization of what Consumers' calls the hospital's woke...
Pro life org asks Senate for another bill to keep abortion defunded of tax dollars

Pro life org asks Senate for another bill to keep abortion defunded of tax dollars

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square With the Working Family Tax Cuts that defunded abortion from federal Medicaid dollars set to expire on July 4, Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America sent...
Oklahoma Senate primary kicks off race to succeed Mullin

Oklahoma Senate primary kicks off race to succeed Mullin

By Caroline BodaThe Center Square Oklahoma voters head to the polls Tuesday to take the first step toward filling the U.S. Senate seat vacated by newly installed Homeland Security Secretary...
Supreme Court to hear immigrant detention case

Supreme Court to hear immigrant detention case

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to take up a case on whether the government can detain certain immigrants who are convicted of committing...