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Louisiana moves to make abortion pills ‘controlled dangerous substances’

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Louisiana could become the first state in the country to categorize mifepristone and misoprostol — the drugs used to induce an abortion — as controlled dangerous substances, threatening incarceration and fines if an individual possesses the pills without a valid prescription or outside of professional practice.

Legislators in Baton Rouge added the provision as a last-minute amendment to a Senate bill that would criminalize an abortion if someone gives a pregnant woman the pills without her consent, a scenario of “coerced criminal abortion” that nearly occurred with one senator’s sister.

A pregnant woman obtaining the two drugs “for her own consumption” would not be at risk of prosecution. But, with the exception of a health-care practitioner, a person helping her get the pills would be.

Louisiana already bans both medication and surgical abortions except to save a patient’s life or because a pregnancy is “medically futile.” Lawmakers just rejected adding exceptions for teenagers under 17 who become pregnant through rape or incest.


The amendment would list mifepristone and misoprostol under the state’s Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substances Act, which regulates depressants, opioids and other sometimes highly addictive drugs. It elicited a strong reaction from more than 240 Louisiana doctors, who called it “not scientifically based.”
“Adding a safe, medically indicated drug for miscarriage management … creates the false perception that these are dangerous drugs that require additional regulation,” they wrote in a letter sent last week to the bill’s sponsor, Republican Sen. Thomas Pressly. They noted misoprostol’s other critical uses, including to prevent gastrointestinal ulcers and to aid in labor and delivery.

“Given its historically poor maternal health outcomes, Louisiana should prioritize safe and evidence-based care for pregnant women,” they urged.


The amendment, written with guidance from Louisiana Right to Life, was added after the Senate unanimously passed S.B. 276 in mid-April. The measure is awaiting a final vote in the House before the session ends June 3, with little opposition expected.
“As Senator Pressly has stated, the medical community regularly uses controlled substances in a myriad of medical situations, including emergencies,” said Sarah Zagorski, communications director for the antiabortion organization. “The use of these drugs for legitimate health care needs will still be available, just like all other controlled substances are still available for legitimate uses.”

The pending language appears to open yet another front in the country’s bitter battle over if and how women can obtain an abortion. Attempts to curtail medication abortions — which now constitute more than half of all abortions in the United States — are part of legislative agendas not just in deep-red Louisiana but in many Republican-controlled statehouses. And in March, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in a case brought against the Food and Drug Administration by a group of antiabortion doctors seeking to limit access to mifepristone.



Pressly did not return repeated requests for comment, but in a statement released by his office, he explained that he was seeking to “control the rampant illegal distribution of abortion-inducing drugs” in Louisiana. He said abortion medication “is frequently abused and is a risk to the health of citizens.” By including the drugs on the controlled substances list, he added, “we will assist law enforcement in protecting vulnerable women and unborn babies.”
His connection to the issue is in part personal. During public testimony in April before the Senate Judiciary Committee, his sister recounted how her then-husband surreptitiously gave her an abortion drug in 2022 when he brought her breakfast for St. Patrick’s Day. They were separated, but Catherine Pressly Herring said she had learned she was pregnant with their third child and he had agreed to marriage counseling.

After she noticed him serving her “cloudy water,” she said she started having “intense cramping.” Doctors were able to stop the process so that the pregnancy could continue. He was sentenced to 180 days in jail. Under Pressly’s bill, a perpetrator would face a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $75,000 fine.


“Through our knowledge of other stories, and from the testimony of local centers in Louisiana caring for women in these situations, the abuse of abortion pills is not isolated to Herring’s situation,” Zagorski said Saturday. “It is very simple for a man to pose as a women to order these pills online without a prescription, even for a minor, and then to pressure a woman to take the pills.”
While doctors say Herring’s experience is deeply troubling, they remain concerned that her brother’s proposed solution would make mifepristone and misoprostol even harder for Louisianans to get for reasons having nothing to do with abortion. Misoprostol is prescribed for treatment after a miscarriage, for example, and to help stop postpartum hemorrhage, one of the leading causes of maternal mortality in the state.

“To OB/GYNs, this is very worrisome,” said Neelima Sukhavasi, an OB/GYN in Baton Rouge and a fellow with Physicians for Reproductive Health. “There’s no one that would endorse what happened to his sister. But this is a safe medication that has many important lifesaving uses. It’s not addictive.”


Misoprostol is also taken to soften the cervix during labor, biopsies for cancer and placement of IUDs. Sukhavasi said she is concerned that Pressly wrote the amendment without consulting physicians or enforcement agencies.

Nimra Chowdhry, senior state legislative counsel at the Center for Reproductive Rights, echoed those concerns but in harsher terms. She accused abortion opponents in Louisiana of misrepresenting the safety and efficacy of the two drugs — a manipulation “in pursuit of blocking people from care.”

This ultimately “turns back the clock on modern medicine,” she said.
Abby LeDoux, vice president of communications at Planned Parenthood Gulf States, is worrying about the “far-reaching” consequences because of the drugs’ other uses.
There are “real questions,” she said, “about what it would mean in practice to open the controlled substances list like this, including what aspects of state law legislatures think manufacturers would follow, even locally.”

 
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It would seem appropriate to call a combination of pharmaceuticals capable of terminating a pregnancy "controlled and dangerous",.. Making these same pharmaceuticals legally available via physician prescription only, also seems appropriate... I've got no problem with this.
 
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Reactions: McLovin32
It would seem appropriate to call a combination of pharmaceuticals capable of terminating a pregnancy "controlled and dangerous",.. Making these same pharmaceuticals legally available via physician prescription only, also seems appropriate... I've got no problem with this.
So does tobacco and alcohol. Both of those increase the risk of an early end to pregnancy. Should those be regulated as well.

Oh. Wait. One more. One in six women who die of gun violence dies during pregnancy. Should guns require a physician prescription? Be heavily regulated? Are guns dangerous?
 
Last I checked tobacco, alcohol and guns are all regulated to varying degrees in every state...
 
Did you read it?

You're Chirstian moralists banned alcohol in the 1920s. How smart was that?

It's 2023 and they're banning books and have finagled a way to politically deprive women of their rights to care for bodies. You're in the 30% range of people agreeing with no abortions. This the fallacy with non-representative government.

The last 2 Republican presidents, especially the last one elected by minority margins loaded the SCOTUS with justices with ultraconservative positions that shaped the political landscape in the quagmire we find ourselves in. Every state in which the issue was raised voted in favor of abortion rights. Even Red states. All states. And Louisiana will too.

JFC. Grow up. Learn how to make decisions on a personal basis.
 
I can't wait for when they attempt to ban any and all birth control because sex should only be for baby makin'


And before anyone says that'll never happen, that's what all of us were told about Roe v Wade being overturned. It's baby steps, no pun intended.
 
It would seem appropriate to call a combination of pharmaceuticals capable of terminating a pregnancy "controlled and dangerous",.. Making these same pharmaceuticals legally available via physician prescription only, also seems appropriate... I've got no problem with this.
Why does this need legislation? What happened to the party of small government? You aren’t conservatives, you are religious zealots that took over a once grand party.
 
You're Chirstian moralists banned alcohol in the 1920s. How smart was that?

It's 2023 and they're banning books and have finagled a way to politically deprive women of their rights to care for bodies. You're in the 30% range of people agreeing with no abortions. This the fallacy with non-representative government.

The last 2 Republican presidents, especially the last one elected by minority margins loaded the SCOTUS with justices with ultraconservative positions that shaped the political landscape in the quagmire we find ourselves in. Every state in which the issue was raised voted in favor of abortion rights. Even Red states. All states. And Louisiana will too.

JFC. Grow up. Learn how to make decisions on a personal basis.
I believe rape victims and terminal pregnancies should have access to abortion pisspants.

That's a hell of a narrative you went with though.



They want to make the black market of abortion pills illegal. It says directly this isn't about the mother it's about the middle person. If a mom goes to a hospital, there isn't a middle guy.

Apache chief your ass into that one.


super-friends-superfriends.gif
 
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I can't wait for when they attempt to ban any and all birth control because sex should only be for baby makin'


And before anyone says that'll never happen, that's what all of us were told about Roe v Wade being overturned. It's baby steps, no pun intended.

Someone gotta pick that cotton, right?
 
  • Like
Reactions: McLovin32
Oh. Wait. One more. One in six women who die of gun violence dies during pregnancy. Should guns require a physician prescription? Be heavily regulated? Are guns dangerous?
Statistics show that women are slightly more likely to be murdered during pregnancy, but the increase isn’t as dramatic as that sentence makes it sound.
 
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