
Mifepristone and misoprostol inside a Deliberate Parenthood clinic in Fairview Heights, In poor health. in 2021. The medicine are used after miscarriage and for bleeding and different obstetrical procedures and issues. Together, they’ll additionally induce an early abortion. Lawmakers in New Orleans are contemplating a invoice to reclassify the medicines as managed harmful substances.
Jeff Roberson/AP
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Jeff Roberson/AP

Mifepristone and misoprostol inside a Deliberate Parenthood clinic in Fairview Heights, In poor health. in 2021. The medicine are used after miscarriage and for bleeding and different obstetrical procedures and issues. Together, they’ll additionally induce an early abortion. Lawmakers in New Orleans are contemplating a invoice to reclassify the medicines as managed harmful substances.
Jeff Roberson/AP
Louisiana lawmakers are contemplating including two medicine generally utilized in being pregnant and reproductive well being care to the state’s checklist of managed harmful substances, in a transfer that has alarmed medical doctors within the state.
Mifepristone and misoprostol have many scientific makes use of, however one FDA-approved use is to take the tablets to induce an abortion as much as ten weeks gestation.

The invoice shifting via the Louisiana legislature would checklist each medicines as Schedule IV medicine beneath the state’s Uniform Managed Harmful Substances Legislation, creating penalties of as much as 10 years in jail for anybody caught with the medicine and not using a legitimate prescription.
It is the most recent transfer by anti-abortion advocates making an attempt to manage entry to abortion medicines in states with near-total abortion bans, comparable to Louisiana. If handed, the legislation can be the primary of its sort, opening up a brand new entrance within the state-by-state battle over reproductive medication.
Republican-controlled states have handed numerous legal guidelines regulating remedy abortion up to now, mentioned Dr. Daniel Grossman, an OB-GYN and reproductive well being researcher on the College of California San Francisco.
However after the Dobbs determination in 2022, scrutiny of remedy abortions escalated much more as clinics in sure states shuttered utterly or had been pressured to cease providing in-clinic procedures.
“It is not shocking that states are attempting the whole lot they’ll to attempt to prohibit these medicine,” Grossman mentioned. “However that is definitely a novel strategy.”
Greater than 250 OB-GYNs, emergency, inner medication and different physicians from throughout Louisiana have signed a letter to the invoice’s sponsor, Republican state senator Thomas Pressly, arguing the transfer may threaten girls’s well being by delaying life-saving care.
“It is simply actually jaw-dropping,” mentioned Dr. Nicole Freehill, a New Orleans OB-GYN who signed the letter. “Nearly a day would not go by that I do not make the most of one or each of those medicines.”
Mifepristone and misoprostol are routinely used to deal with miscarriages or cease obstetric hemorrhaging, induce labor, or put together the cervix for a spread of procedures contained in the uterus, comparable to inserting an IUD or taking a biopsy of the uterine lining.
Proposal added as amendments
The proposal handed out of an Apr. 30 Louisiana Home Administration of Legal Justice committee listening to as amendments to Pressly’s unique invoice creating the crime of “coerced legal abortion” — the place somebody “knowingly” provides abortion tablets to a pregnant girl to trigger or try and trigger an abortion “with out her information or consent.”
Pressly’s sister, Catherine Pressly Herring, testified throughout the listening to that she was given abortion medicine with out her information by her former husband. Pressly mentioned his sister’s story prompted the laws.
In a assertion, state Sen. Pressly defined he added the brand new amendments to “management the rampant unlawful distribution of abortion-inducing medicine.” He didn’t reply to NPR’s requests for remark.
“By inserting these medicine on the managed substance checklist, we’ll help legislation enforcement in defending weak girls and unborn infants,” Pressly wrote.
Louisiana Proper to Life, the state’s strongest anti-abortion group, helped draft the invoice. Claims that rescheduling the medicine may hurt girls’s well being signify “fearmongering,” mentioned communications director Sarah Zagorski.
The actual downside, she says, is mifepristone and misoprostol are too accessible in Louisiana, and are getting used to induce abortions regardless of the state’s ban.
“We have had being pregnant facilities electronic mail us with many tales of minors gaining access to this remedy,” Zagorski mentioned. “That is simply going to create an epidemic in Louisiana of minors and girls and placing the general public well being in danger.”
Research have proven a spike in individuals ordering abortion tablets on-line to provide themselves abortions in states with restrictive abortion bans.
Within the Louisiana committee listening to, anti-abortion advocates confused the invoice would nonetheless permit physicians to dispense mifepristone and misoprostol for lawful medical care, and that ladies who give themselves abortions utilizing the medicines can be exempted from legal legal responsibility.
“Underneath this legislation, or any abortion legislation, in Louisiana, we see the girl as usually the second sufferer,” testified Dorinda Plaisance, a lawyer who works with Louisiana Proper to Life. “And so Louisiana has chosen to criminalize abortion suppliers.”
Transfer not “not scientifically based mostly,” medical doctors say
The Drug Enforcement Company in addition to particular person states have the facility to checklist medicine as managed harmful substances.
State and federal rules goal to manage entry to medicine, comparable to opioids, based mostly on their medical profit and their potential for abuse, in keeping with Joe Fontenot, the manager director of the Louisiana Board of Pharmacy, the state company that screens medicine listed as managed harmful substances.
As in different states, Louisiana tracks these prescriptions in databases which embrace the identify of the affected person, the well being supplier who wrote the prescription, and the meting out pharmacy.
Physicians want a particular license to prescribe the medicine — in 2023, there have been 18,587 physicians in Louisiana, 13,790 of whom had a managed harmful substance license, in keeping with information from the Louisiana State Medical Society and the Board of Pharmacy.
“Each state has a prescription drug monitoring program. They usually actually are designed to establish prescription drug mills which might be hocking fentanyl, and opioid painkillers,” mentioned Robert Mikos, a professor of legislation and drug coverage knowledgeable at Vanderbilt College.
However what occurred to Pressley’s sister — being tricked into taking mifepristone or misoprostol — is a type of drug abuse, mentioned Zagorski of Louisiana Proper To Life, which is why the medicine must be extra strictly managed.
However Fontenot, of the Louisiana Board of Pharmacy, mentioned that beneath Louisiana’s legislation, abuse refers to dependancy.
Dr. Jennifer Avegno, a New Orleans emergency doctor and the director of the New Orleans Division of Well being, agrees.
“There isn’t a danger of somebody getting hooked on misoprostol,” Avegno mentioned.
Underneath the invoice, the 2 medicines can be added to an inventory comprised of opioids, depressants, and stimulants.
“To categorise these medicines as a drug of abuse and dependence in the identical vein as Xanax, Valium, Darvocet isn’t solely scientifically incorrect, however [a] actual concern for limiting entry to those medicine,” Avegno mentioned.
Docs fear the invoice may additionally set a harmful precedent for state officers who wish to prohibit entry to any drug they take into account harmful or objectionable, no matter its addictive potential, Avegno mentioned.
Fears over delays in care
Of their letter, medical doctors mentioned the invoice’s “false notion that these are harmful medicine” may result in “worry and confusion amongst sufferers, medical doctors, and pharmacists, which delays care and worsens outcomes” in a state with excessive charges of maternal damage and dying.
The elevated scrutiny may have a state-wide chilling impact and make medical doctors, pharmacists and even sufferers extra reluctant to make use of these medicine, the medical doctors wrote of their letter.
The state database permits any physician or pharmacist to search for the prescription historical past of his or her affected person. The info can be accessible by the Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners, which licenses physicians and different suppliers, and by legislation enforcement companies with a warrant.
“Might I be investigated for my use of misoprostol? I do not know,” mentioned Freehill.
Pharmacists might be much more reluctant to dispense the medicines, Freehill mentioned — exacerbating an issue she and different OB-GYNs have already been coping with since Louisiana banned practically all abortions. That might depart sufferers miscarrying with out well timed therapy.
“They might be sitting there bleeding, growing their danger that they’d have a harmful quantity of blood loss” or risking an infection, she mentioned.
Already, Freehill now routinely telephones in each prescription for misoprostol when her sufferers are miscarrying so she will clarify to the pharmacist why she’s prescribing it — one thing that will not be attainable if it is made a managed substance as a result of these prescriptions must be written on a pad or despatched electronically.
In hospitals, the medicine would additionally must be locked away, in keeping with a midwife who works in New Orleans and requested to not be recognized so she may converse on a delicate matter. That might probably trigger delays getting the drug when a affected person is hemorrhaging after childbirth.
Docs fear some sufferers is likely to be afraid to take the medicines as soon as they’re listed as “harmful,” Avegno mentioned.
In a written response to the Louisiana physicians who signed the protest letter, state Sen. Pressley mentioned the medical doctors that he is spoken with really feel the proposal “is not going to hurt healthcare for girls.”
Criminalizing assist for individuals giving themselves abortions
Louisiana’s present abortion ban already makes it a criminal offense to supply an abortion, together with by giving somebody medicines used to induce abortion. And a 2022 legislation added as much as 50 years in jail for mailing mifepristone or misoprostol.
As a result of the brand new proposal explicitly exempts pregnant girls, opponents like Elizabeth Ling imagine it’s meant to isolate these girls from others who would assist them. Ling, a reproductive rights legal professional at If/When/How, is especially involved in regards to the jail penalties, which she believes are supposed to frighten and disrupt underground networks of assist for sufferers in search of the tablets.
Pregnant sufferers may fear about ordering on-line or enlisting a buddy to assist receive the tablets: “Is my buddy who is solely simply offering me emotional assist going to one way or the other, you understand, be punished for doing that?” Ling mentioned.
The proposed regulation may additionally goal individuals who aren’t pregnant, however wish to order abortion tablets on-line and inventory them in case of a future being pregnant, a tactic has develop into more and more widespread in states with abortion bans.
In a written response to the Louisiana physicians who signed the protest letter, state Sen. Pressley made it clear he intends to push the invoice ahead. The invoice awaits a full ground vote within the state Home, after which would should be reconciled with a Senate model. If it passes earlier than the legislature adjourns on June 3, it is anticipated to be signed by Republican Governor Jeff Landry, an outspoken opponent of abortion rights.