Litcius/Paper detail

History and Politics of Medication Abortion in the United States and the Rise of Telemedicine and Self-Managed Abortion

Carrie N. Baker

2023Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law11 citationsDOI

Abstract

This article examines the decades-long campaign to increase access to abortion pills in the United States, including advocates' work to win US Food and Drug Administration approval of mifepristone and misoprostol for abortion, the continuing restrictions on mifepristone, and the multiple strategies advocates have pursued to challenge these restrictions, including lobbying the FDA to remove the restrictions, obtaining a limited research exemption from FDA restrictions, and suing the FDA during the COVID-19 pandemic. The article pays particular attention to the influence of research conducted on the safety and efficacy of medication abortion as well as research on the impact of increased availability of abortion pills through telemedicine during the pandemic. The article also addresses self-managed abortion, wherein people obtain and use mifepristone and/or misoprostol outside the formal health care system, and it documents the growing network of organizations providing logistical, medical, and legal support to people self-managing abortion. The article concludes with reflections on the role abortion pills might play in the post-Roe era amid increasingly divergent abortion access trends across different regions of the United States.

Topics & Concepts

AbortionMisoprostolMedical abortionPillMifepristonePandemicTelemedicineMedicinePolitical scienceFamily planningBusinessFamily medicineHealth careLawCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)NursingEnvironmental healthPregnancyPopulationResearch methodologyBiologyGeneticsPathologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Reproductive Health and ContraceptionAmerican Constitutional Law and PoliticsReproductive Health and Technologies