Bipartisan group of lawmakers and advocates at a press conference outside FDA building, advocating for tighter regulations on mail-order abortion pills.
Bipartisan group of lawmakers and advocates at a press conference outside FDA building, advocating for tighter regulations on mail-order abortion pills.
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Poll, high‑profile cases fuel bipartisan push to revisit mail‑order abortion pill rules

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A new national survey and a string of coercion cases are intensifying calls from Republican lawmakers, state attorneys general, and advocacy groups for the FDA to restore tighter safeguards on abortion medications—pressure that comes even as federal health officials say they are reviewing mifepristone’s safety and the FDA has cleared a second generic version.

Recent polling commissioned by SBA Pro‑Life America and conducted by McLaughlin & Associates found that 71% of likely voters support requiring an in‑person doctor visit before prescribing abortion pills, and 70% back screenings for abuse and coercion. A majority of respondents identified as pro‑choice. The online survey of 1,600 likely 2026 voters was fielded August 16–19, 2025 (±2.5 percentage points). (sbaprolife.org)

Access expanded under Biden‑era changes to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy for mifepristone. In December 2021 the agency removed the in‑person dispensing requirement, and in January 2023 it finalized a pharmacy‑certification process that allows dispensing in person or by mail where state law permits. (acog.org)

Advocates cite coercion and abuse cases. In Texas, attorney Mason Herring received a 180‑day jail sentence and probation after pleading guilty to drugging his pregnant wife’s drinks to induce an abortion; she later delivered prematurely. Separately, Texas resident Liana Davis has filed a civil suit alleging her boyfriend spiked her hot chocolate with abortion medication, leading to a miscarriage—allegations he disputes in a countersuit. And Louisiana resident Rosalie Markezich says she was pressured by a boyfriend to take pills obtained by mail; she has joined litigation and related actions targeting mail‑order prescribing, and Louisiana officials have sought the arrest of a California physician accused of sending the drugs. (apnews.com)

Safety claims are sharply contested. A 2025 analysis by the Ethics & Public Policy Center (EPPC), based on 865,727 insurance claims from 2017–2023, estimates that 10.93% of women experienced sepsis, infection, hemorrhage, or another serious adverse event within 45 days—roughly 22 times higher than rates summarized on the drug’s label. Pro‑life medical groups, including the American Association of Pro‑Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists (AAPLOG), have also warned clinicians to watch for rare but dangerous clostridial infections, and a Charlotte Lozier Institute‑linked, peer‑reviewed article challenged the oft‑repeated claim that abortion pills are “safer than Tylenol.” Mainstream medical bodies counter that serious complications are uncommon: ACOG and other summaries put major adverse events at well under 1% in clinical practice. (eppc.org)

Amid the debate, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has told Congress that the prior administration “twisted the data” to bury an “approximately 11%” safety signal and said HHS, through the FDA, is reviewing real‑world outcomes for mifepristone. The comment—disputed by abortion‑rights advocates—came during a Sept. 4, 2025 hearing; a subsequent communication referenced the ongoing review. (news.bloomberglaw.com)

On Oct. 2, 2025, the FDA approved a second generic 200‑mg mifepristone tablet (Evita Solutions), joining the brand‑name Mifeprex and an earlier generic. The agency said its discretion on bioequivalent generics is limited, but the timing triggered criticism from anti‑abortion groups and some Republicans; the company has said it aims to launch in early 2026. (apnews.com)

Advocacy groups have urged the agencies to reverse course. Live Action organized a coalition letter with groups including Students for Life and AAPLOG seeking to rescind the new generic approval and, ultimately, withdraw mifepristone. Separately, 22 state attorneys general, led by Alabama’s Steve Marshall, had earlier called the 2023 rollback of in‑person rules “illegal and dangerous,” and in July 2025 a different coalition of 15 Republican attorneys general asked Congress to preempt state “shield laws” that protect cross‑state, telehealth prescribing and mailing of abortion pills. (liveaction.org)

On Capitol Hill, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R‑S.C.) led a letter signed by 51 Senate Republicans urging HHS and the FDA to reevaluate or halt the generic rollout and restore safeguards while the safety review proceeds. HELP Committee Chair Bill Cassidy (R‑La.) followed with an oversight letter pressing FDA Commissioner Martin (Marty) Makary for details on the review and arguing the decision “fails to mitigate the risks to women … and fails to protect women from the coercive use of the drug.” (britt.senate.gov)

Supporters of broader access, including ACOG and many medical societies, maintain that medication abortion is safe and effective when used as directed, and note that state laws continue to govern availability regardless of federal policy. With legal fights over mail‑order access and cross‑state enforcement intensifying, federal regulators’ review—and how they weigh conflicting datasets—will shape the next phase of the mifepristone debate. (acog.org)

Mitä ihmiset sanovat

Discussions on X reflect a bipartisan concern over the safety of mail-order abortion pills like mifepristone, fueled by a recent poll showing widespread doubt about FDA guidelines and high-profile coercion cases. Pro-life advocates and Republican lawmakers urge restoring in-person dispensing rules to prevent abuse and protect women, while some users and experts defend the drug's safety and criticize restrictions as politically motivated. Neutral reports highlight FDA's ongoing review and generic approval amid pressure.

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The U.S. Department of Justice filed a motion on Friday to halt or dismiss a lawsuit by Missouri and other Republican-led states challenging the FDA's policy allowing mifepristone to be shipped through the mail. The filing argues that proceeding with the case would interfere with an ongoing FDA safety review of the drug initiated by the Trump administration. Pro-life advocates have criticized the move, urging stricter regulations on medication abortion.

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New data shows monthly abortions in the United States rose to 98,630 through June 2025, up from previous years, driven largely by mail-order abortion pills even in states with bans. The Society of Family Planning reported this trend, highlighting telehealth abortions accounting for 27% of cases. Pro-life groups call for federal action to curb the practice.

Anti-abortion advocates who form a key part of the Republican coalition are warning that President Donald Trump’s public suggestion that Republicans be “flexible” on the Hyde Amendment—a long-standing budget provision restricting federal funding for most abortions—could depress turnout among pro-life voters. The dispute intensified after a Trump-aligned consultant was reported to have referred to pro-life voters as “a cheap date,” prompting backlash from groups such as Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America.

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A Democrat-sponsored bill to allow terminally ill adults in Illinois to obtain life-ending medication has cleared the General Assembly and awaits Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s review following a 30–27 Senate vote in the early hours of Oct. 31, after House passage in May.

The Ethiopian Food and Drug Authority (EFDA) issued a directive in December 2025 rewriting rules for narcotic and psychotropic medicines in the health system. The new regulations track shipments from entry into the country through to prescription, dispensing, storage, or destruction. This replaces a system based on serial-numbered prescription pads with broader supply chain accountability.

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A new bill in Tennessee proposes treating abortion as murder under state law, extending equal protection rights to unborn children. Sponsored by Rep. Jody Barrett and Sen. Mark Pody, the legislation aims to address the influx of abortion pills into the state. It would criminalize involvement by anyone, including the woman seeking the procedure.

 

 

 

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