ANALYSIS
Should ‘inconvenient’ science and data be discarded in the pursuit of a political goal?
Today the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) appeared to do just that by rolling back longstanding patient safeguards on the abortion drug mifepristone. Since the FDA first approved mifepristone, then known as “RU-486,” in 2000, the drug has only been available in person from certified providers who had the medical knowledge to reduce some of the risks associated with the drug.
That started to change back in April when the Biden FDA used the COVID-19 public health emergency as an excuse to temporarily suspend safety regulations requiring that mifepristone be dispensed in person. Now, the FDA has abandoned those critical safeguards and formally opened the door to mail-order abortions.
This will likely result in an increase in chemical abortions, and consequently an increase in the deaths of unborn children. Without these vital safeguards ensuring women receive in-person medical care, it will likely also result in increased risks to the health of the mother, including death.
The FDA’s decision stands in sharp contrast to the thousands of complications reported to the FDA since 2000. Two different studies have reviewed severe adverse events from mifepristone reported to the FDA and found at least 20 deaths and well over 2,000 life-threatening or severe complications, including hospitalizations, ruptured ectopic pregnancies, hemorrhaging, and emergency surgery.
Despite these alarming statistics, there is good reason to believe even more women have been harmed. An analysis of the two studies suggests that only five percent of expected serious chemical abortion complications are included in FDA’s dataset. It gets worse. In 2016, the FDA weakened its reporting requirements and essentially turned a blind eye to complications, including life-threatening emergencies, that did not result in death. Consequently, the thousands of adverse events we know about represent only a fraction of the complications women have actually suffered as a result of chemical abortion.
In contrast to the FDA’s incomplete data, a groundbreaking new study shows that chemical abortion complications have been increasing – and fast. Medicaid claims data provides a relatively comprehensive look at the health outcomes of women who get abortions. In 17 states that chose to use their own tax dollars to fund abortion for women enrolled in Medicaid, there were more than 35 emergency room visits for every 100 chemical abortions. Between 2002 and 2015, the rate of chemical abortion-related emergency room visits increased by more than 500 percent. Women undergoing chemical abortions were 53% more likely to end up in the ER with an abortion-related complication than women getting surgical abortions.
The Medicaid study also highlights another major concern about the FDA’s data. Increasingly, women going to the emergency room after chemical abortions were misdiagnosed as having had miscarriages. This was physically impossible since the women had a confirmed chemical abortion, funded by state tax dollars, within 30 days prior to the ER visit. But by 2015, over 60 percent of all chemical abortion-related ER visits were miscoded as miscarriages. Women could have received improper care if their doctors didn’t realize they were suffering from complications of a chemical abortion.
The results of the Medicaid study are unsurprising when considered in the context of studies from nations with more robust data collection systems. A study from Finland found that chemical abortions
had four times the complication rate of surgical abortions, with a fifth of all chemical abortions resulting in complications. The most frequent complications were hemorrhage (16% of the abortions) and incomplete abortion (7%).
Similarly, a study from Sweden found that there was a significant increase in chemical abortion complications between 2008 and 2015. The study did not determine the cause of the increase but did note that among women who had their chemical abortions very early in pregnancy, there were significantly more complications among chemical abortions induced at home rather than at a hospital.
These studies all tell the same story: chemical abortion carries risks, and medical oversight is required. But the FDA’s recent decision ignores the ‘inconvenient’ science and data on the risks of chemical abortion when they should, in fact, be sounding the alarm about a very real public health threat. The FDA should reconsider its decision and restore the full safety standards it once promoted.
Tessa Longbons is a senior research associate at Charlotte Lozier Institute.
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