U.S. FDA allows abortion pills to be sold at retail pharmacies
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[January 04, 2023]
By Ahmed Aboulenein
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -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, 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.
The FDA had first said it would be making those changes in December 2021
when it announced it would relax some risk evaluation and mitigation
strategies, or REMS, on the pill, that had been in place since the
agency approved it in 2000 and were lifted temporarily in 2021 due to
the COVID-19 pandemic.
The changes included permanently removing restrictions on mail order
shipping of the pills and their prescription through telehealth.
The agency finalized the changes on Tuesday after reviewing supplemental
applications from Danco Laboratories and GenBioPro, the two companies
that make the drug in the United States.
"Under the Mifepristone REMS Program, as modified, Mifeprex and its
approved generic can be dispensed by certified pharmacies or by or under
the supervision of a certified prescriber," the agency said on its
website on Tuesday.
Mifeprex is the brand name version of mifepristone which, in combination
with a second drug called misoprostol that has various uses including
miscarriage management, induces an abortion up to 10 weeks into a
pregnancy in a process known as medication abortion.
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.
"Today's news is a step in the right direction for health equity,"
Planned Parenthood President Alexis McGill Johnson said in a statement.
"Being able to access your prescribed medication abortion through the
mail or to pick it up in person from a pharmacy like any other
prescription is a game changer for people trying to access basic health
care," Johnson added.
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A pack of Mifeprex pills, used to
terminate early pregnancies, is displayed in this picture
illustration taken May 11, 2022. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs/Illustration
NO EQUAL ACCESS
The regulatory change will, however, not provide equal access to all
people, GenBioPro, which makes the generic version of mifepristone,
said in a statement.
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.
"State lawmakers and Congress must stand as a bulwark against the
Biden administration's pro-abortion extremism," she said in a
statement.
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. "We
will continue to enable our pharmacists to dispense medications
consistent with federal and state law."
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein; Additional reporting by Eric Beech
in Washington, Shivani Tanna, Rahat Sandhu, and Kanjyik Ghosh in
Bengaluru; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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