Let's Talk About Misoprostol--the Original Abortion Pill
Lets Talk About Misoprostolthe Original Abortion Pill
7/28/2022 by Caitlin Gerdts, Ruvani Jayaweera and Carrie N. Baker
lThe World Health Organization recommends two regimens for medication abortion: misoprostol alone or combined with another medication, mifepristone. (Robyn Beck / AFP via Getty Images)
The Supreme Courts overturning of Roe v. Wade has paved the way for more than half of U.S. states to outlaw abortion. As we look to the future of abortion in the U.S., we can learn from the experiences of people in countries with restrictive abortion laws who have managed to find safe, effective ways to have abortions by using the original abortion pill: misoprostol. In the 1980s, Brazilians discovered that an ulcer medication, misoprostol, could induce a miscarriage by causing contractions of the uterus to expel a pregnancy. Across Latin America, women and other people who can become pregnant began to use misoprostol to manage their own abortions. Infection, hemorrhaging and death from unsafe abortion declined precipitously.
The World Health Organization recommends two regimens for medication abortion: misoprostol alone or combined with another medication, mifepristone, which blocks the hormone progesterone to end a pregnancy. Today, in countries where abortion is legally available, misoprostol is most commonly used together with mifepristone. But where abortion is legally restricted, misoprostol is often used alone for self-managed abortion because it is inexpensive and widely available, often over the counter (unlike mifepristone).
Around the globe, grassroots feminists have organized abortion support such as safe-abortion hotlines for those who are self-managing abortions, often with misoprostol alone. Study after study has found that self-managed abortion with misoprostol is more than 90 percent effective. Why, then, are most clinic-based abortions performed using misoprostol in combination with mifepristone? For one, early clinical trials showed that misoprostol was less effective alone than in combination with mifepristonebut recent evidence on self-managed use of misoprostol alone suggests otherwise.
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Under abortion bans and restrictions, police and prosecutors are most likely to target people who are already criminalized and surveilled, including those who are low income, Black/Indigenous/of color, immigrant and undocumented. For information and support with legal questions about self-managed abortion, contact the Repro Legal Helpline, or access bail and legal counsel through the Repro Legal Defense Fund. The Digital Defense Fund offers detailed information about how to protect ones identity when searching for abortion pill information and purchasing medications online. For decades, women living in countries where abortion is restricted have self-managed their abortions in a safe, affordable way using misoprostol alone. In light of Dobbs, many in the U.S. will no doubt follow their lead. And feminists will be there to support them when they do.
https://msmagazine.com/2022/07/28/misoprostol-abortion-pill/