Abortion pills "just in case"? Planned Parenthood will offer them in two states
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Abortion pills "just in case"? Planned Parenthood will offer them in two states
Research indicates many Americans stock up on abortion medications when restrictions are in the news, even without being pregnant. A Planned Parenthood affiliate launched an advance provision program called “Just In Case Abortion Pills,” allowing people to obtain mifepristone and misoprostol to keep for later use if they choose to end an early pregnancy. Telehealth organizations have provided advance prescriptions for years, but the Planned Parenthood brand and trust may make the approach more accessible to people unfamiliar with it. Hawaii and Washington geography can make timely care difficult, and timing matters during pregnancy. The safety record of the medication combination is well established, and patients can legally keep abortion medication on hand in most states, with Louisiana as an exception.
"Research shows that many Americans take abortion restrictions in the news as a signal to stock up on abortion medications even if they're not pregnant. Now, for the first time, a Planned Parenthood affiliate is offering what's called the “advance provision” of abortion medication. The initiative, shared exclusively with NPR, launched Thursday and is called “Just In Case Abortion Pills.” It means people can have the abortion pills mifepristone and misoprostol on their shelf to be used in the future if they want to end an early pregnancy."
"“As evidence supporting this model of care has continued to grow, and with supportive policy environments in Washington and in Hawai'i, this really is the right time for us to step into this space,” says Rebecca Gibron, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawai'i, Alaska, Indiana and Kentucky. A range of telehealth organizations have offered prescriptions of abortion medication in advance for the past several years. Elisa Wells, co-founder of the website about medication abortion called Plan C, says this move by a Planned Parenthood affiliate is significant."
"“The idea that you can get abortion pills by mail or that you can get them in advance is really new to a lot of people,” she says. “So having a group like Planned Parenthood that does have such trust and name recognition adding those services is really important.” She points out that the geography of both Hawaii and Washington make it so that getting care quickly can be a challenge, and since days and hours matter during pregnancy, stocking up in advance might be especially important."
"She adds that the safety record of the two medications usually used together for abortion is well established, and that it's legal for patients to have abortion medication on hand in 49 states (Louisiana is the exception; the state made the medications controlled substances in 2"
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