So many abortion restrictions have been introduced in the states since 2010 — 231 of them enacted into law — you might think there could be no more surprises in the effort to ban or restrict the procedure. But judging from the events of a single day last week, you’d be wrong.
On March 25, the Arizona legislature passed a so-called “abortion reversal” bill, requiring doctors to inform their patients that they could possibly reverse an abortion mid-procedure. On the same day, the Kansas legislature passed a so-called “dismemberment abortion” ban, not a medical term, but apparently banning later abortions. Both bills are the first of their kind and are likely to be signed into law by governors who oppose abortion. Both have been derided by medical and legal experts as defying scientific evidence and constitutional rights. And both bills were immediately introduced in various forms in other states – in the Arizona law’s case, Arkansas; and in Kansas’s case, Oklahoma. This won’t be the last you will hear about such measures.
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So what, exactly, is an abortion reversal? Well, the first thing you need to know is that the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says there is no evidence for such a thing. “We like to practice medicine that is evidenced based and unfortunately the protocol that has been suggested for reversing a medication abortion has no evidence to support it,” Dr. Ilana Addis testified in a legislative committee hearing.
An increasingly popular method of terminating a pregnancy, known as medication abortion, involves a doctor administering two pills that ultimately induce miscarriage. The purported “reversal” happens in the event that after taking the first pill, the woman changes her mind. That’s when the doctor injects her with the hormone progesterone, which allegedly stops the abortion in its tracks. Anti-abortion physicians are already experimenting with such “reversals” across the country, and claiming success with subsequent live births.
But not only has there been no formal medical study or FDA approval of the protocol or its potential side effects, there’s no reason to think the progesterone is even doing anything to stop the abortion. Abortion provider Dr. Cheryl Chastine told Talking Points Memo, “The medical literature is quite clear that mifepristone on its own” – the first pill in a medication abortion – “is only about 50% effective at ending a pregnancy. That means that even if these doctors were to offer a large dose of purple Skittles, they’d appear to have ‘worked’ to ‘save’ the pregnancy about half the time.”
Under Supreme Court precedent, states may require that women be given information that is intended to talk them out of having an abortion – as long as that information is “truthful and not misleading.” Given the tenuous data behind it, the Arizona law very likely runs afoul of that principle, although the call will be made by the federal judge who will hear the case when it is almost certainly challenged. (It helps abortion rights advocates that Arizona sits in the liberal-leaning Ninth Circuit.)
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