Birth control and abortion pill requests have surged since Trump won the
election
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[November 14, 2024]
By LAURA UNGAR
Hours after Donald Trump was elected president for the second time, Dr.
Clayton Alfonso had two messages from patients seeking to replace their
IUDs. Over the next few days, three women inquired about getting their
tubes tied.
All of them said the election was the reason they were making these
choices now.
Requests for long-term birth control and permanent sterilizations have
surged across the nation since the election, doctors told The Associated
Press. And companies that sell emergency contraception and abortion
pills say they're seeing significant spikes in requests from people who
are stockpiling the medications — one saw a 966% increase in sales of
emergency contraception from the week before in the 60 hours after the
election.
“I saw this bump after the Trump election in 2016" and after Roe vs.
Wade was overturned in 2022, said Alfonso, an OB-GYN at Duke University
in North Carolina. “But the patients seem more afraid this time.”
Although anti-abortion advocates are pressing Trump for more
restrictions on abortion pills, it's unclear what — if much — will be
done regarding access to contraceptives of any kind during the second
Trump administration. Trump told a Pittsburgh television station in May
that he was open to supporting regulations on contraception. But after
media reports on the interview, he wrote on his social media platform
Truth Social that he “has never and will never” advocate for restricting
birth control and other contraceptives.
Alfonso said his patients want to replace still-effective IUDs and
“restart” the 3-to-12-year clock on them before the inauguration. He
also said the women are particularly concerned about IUDs, which have
been attacked by abortion opponents who believe life begins when an egg
is fertilized. Experts believe the devices work mostly by blocking
fertilization, but also may make it harder for a fertilized egg to
implant in the womb.
A patient who requested a tubal ligation Tuesday told Alfonso she
doesn’t want kids and is “just absolutely terrified of either forced
pregnancy or inability to access contraception."
Pittsburgh OB-GYN and abortion provider Dr. Grace Ferguson said more of
her patients are scheduling IUD insertions or stockpiling emergency
contraception, telling her upfront that it’s “because of the upcoming
administration change.”
One patient, Mara Zupko, said she wants prescription emergency
contraception since she’s on the cusp of the weight limit for Plan B,
the most well-known over-the-counter type. Her husband is getting a
vasectomy.
“We always kind of teetered on whether we wanted children or not,” said
Zupko, 27. ”But as the world has become scarier and scarier, we realized
we didn’t want to bring a child into that environment. And I also have
several health risks.”
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Mifepristone tablets are seen in a Planned Parenthood clinic July
18, 2024, in Ames, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)
Women are also turning to companies
that sell emergency contraception online or offer abortion pills
mifepristone and misoprostol through telehealth — something that's
been happening even before the election, but that some companies say
has accelerated.
A study earlier this year showed the abortion pill
supplier Aid Access received about 48,400 requests from across the
U.S. for so-called “advance provision” pills from September 2021
through April 2023 — with requests highest right after news leaked
about Roe being overturned but before the formal announcement. Other
research found that more women had their tubes tied post-Roe, with
the biggest increases in states that ban abortion.
Mifepristone has a shelf life of about five years and misoprostol
around two years, according to Plan C, an organization that provides
information about medical abortions. Plan B typically has a shelf
life of four years.
Telehealth company Wisp saw orders for abortion pills spike 600%
between Election Day and the following day. And between Nov. 6 and
11, the company saw a 460% increase in sales of its emergency
contraception and birth control offerings.
At Gen Z-focused Winx Health, which sells emergency contraception
called Restart, company leaders saw a 966% increase in sales in the
60 hours following the election compared with the week before. Sales
of “value packs” of Restart — four doses instead of one — were up
more than 7,000% in the past week.
"Morning after pills” are legal in all states, but Winx co-founder
Cynthia Plotch said many people seem confused about what emergency
contraception is compared to abortion pills. In a 2023 poll by the
health policy research organization KFF, a majority of responders
said they know these two things aren't the same, but only 27%
reported knowing emergency contraceptive pills cannot end a
pregnancy.
Doctors agree confusion around morning after pills may explain some
of the stockpiling. But Alfonso at Duke suspects most people are
doing this for the same reason they are seeking longer-term methods
of birth control: to avoid abortion by preventing pregnancy in the
first place.
Alfonso predicts the birth control and abortion pill surge may level
out like it did in 2016 and 2022. If the new administration “is not
focused on health care right away," he said, "then I think it’ll go
to the back of people’s minds until it picks up in the media.”
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