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An appeal for equitable access to care for early pregnancy loss
Remarkable advances in care for early pregnancy loss (EPL) have occurred over the past several years. Misoprostol with mifepristone pretreatment is now the gold standard for medical management after recent research showed that this regimen improves both the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of medical management.1 Manual vacuum aspiration (MVA)’s portability, effectiveness, and safety ensure that providers can offer procedural EPL management in almost any clinical setting. Medication management and in-office uterine aspiration are two evidence-based options for EPL management that may increase access for the 25% of pregnant women who experience EPL. Unfortunately, many women do not have access to either option. Equitable access to early pregnancy loss management can be achieved by expanding access to mifepristone and office-based MVA.
However, access to mifepristone and initiating office-based MVA is challenging. Mifepristone is one of several medications regulated under the Food and Drug Administration’s Risk Evaluation and Management Strategies (REMS) program.2
The REMS guidelines restrict clinicians in prescribing and dispensing mifepristone, including the key provision that mifepristone may be dispensed only in clinics, medical offices, and hospitals. Clinicians cannot write a prescription for mifepristone for a patient to pick up at the pharmacy. Efforts are underway to roll back the REMS. Barriers to office-based MVA include time, culture shift among staff, gathering equipment, and creating protocols. Clinicians can improve access to EPL management in a variety of ways:
- MVA training: Ob.gyns. who lack training in MVA use can take advantage of several programs designed to teach the skill to clinicians, including programs such as Training, Education, and Advocacy in Miscarriage Management (TEAMM).3,4 MVA is easy to learn for ob.gyns. and procedural complications are uncommon. In the office setting, complications requiring transfer to a higher level of care are rare.5 With adequate training, whether during residency or afterward, ob.gyns. can learn to safely and effectively use MVA for procedural EPL management in the office and in the emergency department.
- Partnerships with pharmacists to reduce barriers to mifepristone: Ob.gyns. working in a variety of clinical settings, including independent clinics, critical access hospitals, community hospitals, and academic medical centers, have worked closely with on-site pharmacists to place mifepristone on their practice sites’ formularies.6 These ob.gyn.–pharmacist collaborations often require explanations to institutional Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) committees of the benefits of mifepristone to patients, detailed indications for mifepristone’s use, and methods to secure mifepristone on site.
- Partnerships with emergency department and outpatient nursing and administration to promote MVA: Provision of MVA is ideal for safe, effective, and cost-efficient procedural EPL management in both the emergency department and outpatient setting. However, access to MVA in emergency rooms and outpatient clinical settings is suboptimal. Some clinicians push back against MVA use in the emergency department, citing fears that performing the procedure in the emergency department unnecessarily uses staff and resources reserved for patients with more critical illnesses. Ob.gyns. should also work with emergency medicine physicians and emergency department nursing staff and hospital administrators in explaining that MVA in the emergency room is patient centered and cost effective.
Interdisciplinary collaboration and training are two strategies that can increase access to mifepristone and MVA for EPL management. Use of mifepristone/misoprostol and office/emergency department MVA for treatment of EPL is patient centered, evidence based, feasible, highly effective, and timely. These two health care interventions are practical in almost any setting, including rural and other low-resource settings. By using these strategies to overcome the logistical and institutional challenges, ob.gyns. can help countless women with EPL gain access to the best EPL care.
Dr. Espey is chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Dr. Jackson is an obstetrician/gynecologist at Michigan State University in Flint. They have no disclosures to report.
References
1. Schreiber CA et al. N Engl J Med. 2018 Jun 7;378(23):2161-70.
2. Food and Drug Administration. Mifeprex (mifepristone) information.
3. The TEAMM (Training, Education, and Advocacy in Miscarriage Management) Project. Training interprofessional teams to manage miscarriage. Accessed March 15, 2021.
4. Quinley KE et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2019 Jul;72(1):86-92.
5. Milingos DS et al. BJOG. 2009 Aug;116(9):1268-71.
6. Calloway D et al. Contraception. 2021 Jul;104(1):24-8.
Remarkable advances in care for early pregnancy loss (EPL) have occurred over the past several years. Misoprostol with mifepristone pretreatment is now the gold standard for medical management after recent research showed that this regimen improves both the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of medical management.1 Manual vacuum aspiration (MVA)’s portability, effectiveness, and safety ensure that providers can offer procedural EPL management in almost any clinical setting. Medication management and in-office uterine aspiration are two evidence-based options for EPL management that may increase access for the 25% of pregnant women who experience EPL. Unfortunately, many women do not have access to either option. Equitable access to early pregnancy loss management can be achieved by expanding access to mifepristone and office-based MVA.
However, access to mifepristone and initiating office-based MVA is challenging. Mifepristone is one of several medications regulated under the Food and Drug Administration’s Risk Evaluation and Management Strategies (REMS) program.2
The REMS guidelines restrict clinicians in prescribing and dispensing mifepristone, including the key provision that mifepristone may be dispensed only in clinics, medical offices, and hospitals. Clinicians cannot write a prescription for mifepristone for a patient to pick up at the pharmacy. Efforts are underway to roll back the REMS. Barriers to office-based MVA include time, culture shift among staff, gathering equipment, and creating protocols. Clinicians can improve access to EPL management in a variety of ways:
- MVA training: Ob.gyns. who lack training in MVA use can take advantage of several programs designed to teach the skill to clinicians, including programs such as Training, Education, and Advocacy in Miscarriage Management (TEAMM).3,4 MVA is easy to learn for ob.gyns. and procedural complications are uncommon. In the office setting, complications requiring transfer to a higher level of care are rare.5 With adequate training, whether during residency or afterward, ob.gyns. can learn to safely and effectively use MVA for procedural EPL management in the office and in the emergency department.
- Partnerships with pharmacists to reduce barriers to mifepristone: Ob.gyns. working in a variety of clinical settings, including independent clinics, critical access hospitals, community hospitals, and academic medical centers, have worked closely with on-site pharmacists to place mifepristone on their practice sites’ formularies.6 These ob.gyn.–pharmacist collaborations often require explanations to institutional Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) committees of the benefits of mifepristone to patients, detailed indications for mifepristone’s use, and methods to secure mifepristone on site.
- Partnerships with emergency department and outpatient nursing and administration to promote MVA: Provision of MVA is ideal for safe, effective, and cost-efficient procedural EPL management in both the emergency department and outpatient setting. However, access to MVA in emergency rooms and outpatient clinical settings is suboptimal. Some clinicians push back against MVA use in the emergency department, citing fears that performing the procedure in the emergency department unnecessarily uses staff and resources reserved for patients with more critical illnesses. Ob.gyns. should also work with emergency medicine physicians and emergency department nursing staff and hospital administrators in explaining that MVA in the emergency room is patient centered and cost effective.
Interdisciplinary collaboration and training are two strategies that can increase access to mifepristone and MVA for EPL management. Use of mifepristone/misoprostol and office/emergency department MVA for treatment of EPL is patient centered, evidence based, feasible, highly effective, and timely. These two health care interventions are practical in almost any setting, including rural and other low-resource settings. By using these strategies to overcome the logistical and institutional challenges, ob.gyns. can help countless women with EPL gain access to the best EPL care.
Dr. Espey is chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Dr. Jackson is an obstetrician/gynecologist at Michigan State University in Flint. They have no disclosures to report.
References
1. Schreiber CA et al. N Engl J Med. 2018 Jun 7;378(23):2161-70.
2. Food and Drug Administration. Mifeprex (mifepristone) information.
3. The TEAMM (Training, Education, and Advocacy in Miscarriage Management) Project. Training interprofessional teams to manage miscarriage. Accessed March 15, 2021.
4. Quinley KE et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2019 Jul;72(1):86-92.
5. Milingos DS et al. BJOG. 2009 Aug;116(9):1268-71.
6. Calloway D et al. Contraception. 2021 Jul;104(1):24-8.
Remarkable advances in care for early pregnancy loss (EPL) have occurred over the past several years. Misoprostol with mifepristone pretreatment is now the gold standard for medical management after recent research showed that this regimen improves both the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of medical management.1 Manual vacuum aspiration (MVA)’s portability, effectiveness, and safety ensure that providers can offer procedural EPL management in almost any clinical setting. Medication management and in-office uterine aspiration are two evidence-based options for EPL management that may increase access for the 25% of pregnant women who experience EPL. Unfortunately, many women do not have access to either option. Equitable access to early pregnancy loss management can be achieved by expanding access to mifepristone and office-based MVA.
However, access to mifepristone and initiating office-based MVA is challenging. Mifepristone is one of several medications regulated under the Food and Drug Administration’s Risk Evaluation and Management Strategies (REMS) program.2
The REMS guidelines restrict clinicians in prescribing and dispensing mifepristone, including the key provision that mifepristone may be dispensed only in clinics, medical offices, and hospitals. Clinicians cannot write a prescription for mifepristone for a patient to pick up at the pharmacy. Efforts are underway to roll back the REMS. Barriers to office-based MVA include time, culture shift among staff, gathering equipment, and creating protocols. Clinicians can improve access to EPL management in a variety of ways:
- MVA training: Ob.gyns. who lack training in MVA use can take advantage of several programs designed to teach the skill to clinicians, including programs such as Training, Education, and Advocacy in Miscarriage Management (TEAMM).3,4 MVA is easy to learn for ob.gyns. and procedural complications are uncommon. In the office setting, complications requiring transfer to a higher level of care are rare.5 With adequate training, whether during residency or afterward, ob.gyns. can learn to safely and effectively use MVA for procedural EPL management in the office and in the emergency department.
- Partnerships with pharmacists to reduce barriers to mifepristone: Ob.gyns. working in a variety of clinical settings, including independent clinics, critical access hospitals, community hospitals, and academic medical centers, have worked closely with on-site pharmacists to place mifepristone on their practice sites’ formularies.6 These ob.gyn.–pharmacist collaborations often require explanations to institutional Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) committees of the benefits of mifepristone to patients, detailed indications for mifepristone’s use, and methods to secure mifepristone on site.
- Partnerships with emergency department and outpatient nursing and administration to promote MVA: Provision of MVA is ideal for safe, effective, and cost-efficient procedural EPL management in both the emergency department and outpatient setting. However, access to MVA in emergency rooms and outpatient clinical settings is suboptimal. Some clinicians push back against MVA use in the emergency department, citing fears that performing the procedure in the emergency department unnecessarily uses staff and resources reserved for patients with more critical illnesses. Ob.gyns. should also work with emergency medicine physicians and emergency department nursing staff and hospital administrators in explaining that MVA in the emergency room is patient centered and cost effective.
Interdisciplinary collaboration and training are two strategies that can increase access to mifepristone and MVA for EPL management. Use of mifepristone/misoprostol and office/emergency department MVA for treatment of EPL is patient centered, evidence based, feasible, highly effective, and timely. These two health care interventions are practical in almost any setting, including rural and other low-resource settings. By using these strategies to overcome the logistical and institutional challenges, ob.gyns. can help countless women with EPL gain access to the best EPL care.
Dr. Espey is chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Dr. Jackson is an obstetrician/gynecologist at Michigan State University in Flint. They have no disclosures to report.
References
1. Schreiber CA et al. N Engl J Med. 2018 Jun 7;378(23):2161-70.
2. Food and Drug Administration. Mifeprex (mifepristone) information.
3. The TEAMM (Training, Education, and Advocacy in Miscarriage Management) Project. Training interprofessional teams to manage miscarriage. Accessed March 15, 2021.
4. Quinley KE et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2019 Jul;72(1):86-92.
5. Milingos DS et al. BJOG. 2009 Aug;116(9):1268-71.
6. Calloway D et al. Contraception. 2021 Jul;104(1):24-8.
Empowering women through self-managed abortion
Consider Ashley, a 22-year-old G3P2, 8 weeks pregnant, on Medicaid and living in rural Arkansas. The victim of intimate partner violence, she just broke up with her boyfriend and feels she does not have the financial or emotional resources to raise another child; she has no family in town to turn to and wants to be the best parent she can be to her 10-month-old and 3-year old.
In Arkansas, as in many other states and the District of Columbia, Medicaid covers abortion only for rape, incest, or danger to the woman’s life. Arkansas, as well as many other states, requires women to wait 48 hours following counseling before they can proceed with abortion. Waiting periods exacerbate Ashley’s tenuous situation. Will her boss give her time off from work? How will she get to the clinic? Who will watch her children? And lost wages and greater expenses are not the only problems she faces. Arkansas requires a legal contract between the abortion provider and a physician with hospital admitting privileges to provide medical abortion. The result: Only one clinic in Arkansas can legally provide medical abortion for its entire female population. For our impoverished young mother of two, the best choice is the most difficult. And she is far from alone.
Since 2010, many states have passed numerous laws restricting access to safe abortion. As geography plays a growing role in determining access, women and health care providers actively seek ways to circumvent barriers. Telemedicine, initially designed to expedite primary care for patients whose access was hampered by Boston traffic, now brings quality health care to areas lacking providers.1 Telemedicine works for a variety of medical services, from prescribing antibiotics to performing neurosurgery; reproductive health care is part of this digital revolution.2 In 2008, Iowa’s Planned Parenthood of the Heartland began using telemedicine to offer medical abortion.3
As approved by the Food and Drug Administration, medical abortion is the termination of a pregnancy of up to 10 weeks’ gestation using a combination of mifepristone and misoprostol, the former taken to block progesterone receptors, the latter to cause expulsion of the pregnancy. Today, about a third of all abortions in the United States are medical abortions. Because current FDA regulations require that mifepristone be dispensed by a physician, patients usually receive the medications after an in-person evaluation by a health care provider in a clinic.
Two models of telemedicine could improve access for Ashley.
In the first, like the Iowa Planned Parenthood model, remote clinic staff evaluate patients with history and physical examination, ultrasonography, and hemoglobin measurement; the information is forwarded to an off-site physician who has a video discussion with the patient and remotely dispenses the medication for eligible candidates. Between 2008 and 2015, Iowa Planned Parenthood provided 8,765 medical abortions using this model.3 Clinically adverse events, such as hospital admission, surgery, blood transfusion, and death occurred in 16 (0.18%) with no ectopic pregnancies or death.3 For comparison, the rate of severe maternal morbidity in the United States is 1.4%, approximately 10 times the rate with this model of medical abortion.4
In the second model of fully self-managed telemedicine abortion, patients complete a checklist that is reviewed by a provider who sends the medications through the mail. For safety, women must be able to determine their eligibility through the checklist, manage the medications, and self-assess for abortion completion. The World Health Organization endorses self-managed abortion as an option when there is “a source of accurate information and access to a health care provider should they need or want it at any stage of the process.”5 Women on Web, an organization that has provided telemedicine abortion to women globally, has recently begun providing services to the United States after sweeping restrictions vastly increased the number of requests from U.S. women. The U.S. service, Aid Access, operates similarly and for $95 provides online consultation, shipping of the medications, and Skype or phone calls for questions.6
Self-managed abortion has a bad reputation, in part from anti-abortion activists who seek to punish women who attempt to end their pregnancies themselves, but also because of its association with pre–Roe v. Wade “back alley” unsafe abortions. Neither perspective recognizes the benefits of safe self-managed abortion. Some states have criminalized self-induced abortion; both the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association have voiced opposition to such laws to ensure that women do not fear prosecution for seeking medical care for complications.
Given the landscape of abortion access in the United States, where legal constraints, lack of insurance, and a dearth of providers may create insurmountable barriers, we support self-managed abortion for the following reasons:
- Access barriers: The complexity and number of legal restrictions to abortion care have made it unavailable/unaffordable through traditional clinic visits in many parts of the United States. With the addition of Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, restrictions are likely to increase.
- Safety: The evidence-based assessment of the World Health Organization is that in-person clinical evaluation is unnecessary if the appropriate checklists, educational information, and access to a provider are available.
- Autonomy and equity: Even without the barriers mentioned above, self-managed telemedicine abortion remains a patient-centered option. Often more accessible and less expensive, inherently more private, it is bound to appeal to many women.
This decade has seen unprecedented challenges to comprehensive safe reproductive health care, with no relief in sight. In the decades prior to Roe v. Wade, illegal abortions were responsible for 20% of all maternal mortality in the United States. As government, national medical organizations, and the public become more aware of our intolerably high maternal mortality rate, these actors are increasingly driven to bring our maternal health to parity with our industrialized peers. Restricting access to safe abortion runs counter to that goal. Two hundred forty years of American history teach us that legal restrictions do not prevent abortions, because they do not eliminate the reasons for which women seek abortion. Legal restrictions do, however, prevent women from ending pregnancies in the safest manner possible. The inability to obtain safe abortions invariably leads to dead women – our mothers, daughters, sisters, and wives. In this country’s harsh political climate, we must protect a woman’s right to choose. By advocating for innovative approaches to protect women’s reproductive choices, we empower women and save lives.
Dr. Anwar is an obstetrician/gynecologist at Michigan State University in Flint and Dr. Espey is professor and chair of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Neither of them have conflicts of interest. Email them at obnews@mdedge.com.
References
1. “How a ‘Stupid Idea’ Gave Birth to Telemedicine,” MedPageToday. Dec 15, .
2. J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2016 Dec;25(6):753-7.
3. Obstet Gynecol. 2017 Oct;130(4):778-82.
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Severe Maternal Morbidity in the United States.
5. Guttmacher Rep Public Policy. 2018;21:41-7.
6. “International ‘safe abortions by mail’ service can now ship to women in US,” The Hill, Nov 7, 2018.
Consider Ashley, a 22-year-old G3P2, 8 weeks pregnant, on Medicaid and living in rural Arkansas. The victim of intimate partner violence, she just broke up with her boyfriend and feels she does not have the financial or emotional resources to raise another child; she has no family in town to turn to and wants to be the best parent she can be to her 10-month-old and 3-year old.
In Arkansas, as in many other states and the District of Columbia, Medicaid covers abortion only for rape, incest, or danger to the woman’s life. Arkansas, as well as many other states, requires women to wait 48 hours following counseling before they can proceed with abortion. Waiting periods exacerbate Ashley’s tenuous situation. Will her boss give her time off from work? How will she get to the clinic? Who will watch her children? And lost wages and greater expenses are not the only problems she faces. Arkansas requires a legal contract between the abortion provider and a physician with hospital admitting privileges to provide medical abortion. The result: Only one clinic in Arkansas can legally provide medical abortion for its entire female population. For our impoverished young mother of two, the best choice is the most difficult. And she is far from alone.
Since 2010, many states have passed numerous laws restricting access to safe abortion. As geography plays a growing role in determining access, women and health care providers actively seek ways to circumvent barriers. Telemedicine, initially designed to expedite primary care for patients whose access was hampered by Boston traffic, now brings quality health care to areas lacking providers.1 Telemedicine works for a variety of medical services, from prescribing antibiotics to performing neurosurgery; reproductive health care is part of this digital revolution.2 In 2008, Iowa’s Planned Parenthood of the Heartland began using telemedicine to offer medical abortion.3
As approved by the Food and Drug Administration, medical abortion is the termination of a pregnancy of up to 10 weeks’ gestation using a combination of mifepristone and misoprostol, the former taken to block progesterone receptors, the latter to cause expulsion of the pregnancy. Today, about a third of all abortions in the United States are medical abortions. Because current FDA regulations require that mifepristone be dispensed by a physician, patients usually receive the medications after an in-person evaluation by a health care provider in a clinic.
Two models of telemedicine could improve access for Ashley.
In the first, like the Iowa Planned Parenthood model, remote clinic staff evaluate patients with history and physical examination, ultrasonography, and hemoglobin measurement; the information is forwarded to an off-site physician who has a video discussion with the patient and remotely dispenses the medication for eligible candidates. Between 2008 and 2015, Iowa Planned Parenthood provided 8,765 medical abortions using this model.3 Clinically adverse events, such as hospital admission, surgery, blood transfusion, and death occurred in 16 (0.18%) with no ectopic pregnancies or death.3 For comparison, the rate of severe maternal morbidity in the United States is 1.4%, approximately 10 times the rate with this model of medical abortion.4
In the second model of fully self-managed telemedicine abortion, patients complete a checklist that is reviewed by a provider who sends the medications through the mail. For safety, women must be able to determine their eligibility through the checklist, manage the medications, and self-assess for abortion completion. The World Health Organization endorses self-managed abortion as an option when there is “a source of accurate information and access to a health care provider should they need or want it at any stage of the process.”5 Women on Web, an organization that has provided telemedicine abortion to women globally, has recently begun providing services to the United States after sweeping restrictions vastly increased the number of requests from U.S. women. The U.S. service, Aid Access, operates similarly and for $95 provides online consultation, shipping of the medications, and Skype or phone calls for questions.6
Self-managed abortion has a bad reputation, in part from anti-abortion activists who seek to punish women who attempt to end their pregnancies themselves, but also because of its association with pre–Roe v. Wade “back alley” unsafe abortions. Neither perspective recognizes the benefits of safe self-managed abortion. Some states have criminalized self-induced abortion; both the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association have voiced opposition to such laws to ensure that women do not fear prosecution for seeking medical care for complications.
Given the landscape of abortion access in the United States, where legal constraints, lack of insurance, and a dearth of providers may create insurmountable barriers, we support self-managed abortion for the following reasons:
- Access barriers: The complexity and number of legal restrictions to abortion care have made it unavailable/unaffordable through traditional clinic visits in many parts of the United States. With the addition of Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, restrictions are likely to increase.
- Safety: The evidence-based assessment of the World Health Organization is that in-person clinical evaluation is unnecessary if the appropriate checklists, educational information, and access to a provider are available.
- Autonomy and equity: Even without the barriers mentioned above, self-managed telemedicine abortion remains a patient-centered option. Often more accessible and less expensive, inherently more private, it is bound to appeal to many women.
This decade has seen unprecedented challenges to comprehensive safe reproductive health care, with no relief in sight. In the decades prior to Roe v. Wade, illegal abortions were responsible for 20% of all maternal mortality in the United States. As government, national medical organizations, and the public become more aware of our intolerably high maternal mortality rate, these actors are increasingly driven to bring our maternal health to parity with our industrialized peers. Restricting access to safe abortion runs counter to that goal. Two hundred forty years of American history teach us that legal restrictions do not prevent abortions, because they do not eliminate the reasons for which women seek abortion. Legal restrictions do, however, prevent women from ending pregnancies in the safest manner possible. The inability to obtain safe abortions invariably leads to dead women – our mothers, daughters, sisters, and wives. In this country’s harsh political climate, we must protect a woman’s right to choose. By advocating for innovative approaches to protect women’s reproductive choices, we empower women and save lives.
Dr. Anwar is an obstetrician/gynecologist at Michigan State University in Flint and Dr. Espey is professor and chair of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Neither of them have conflicts of interest. Email them at obnews@mdedge.com.
References
1. “How a ‘Stupid Idea’ Gave Birth to Telemedicine,” MedPageToday. Dec 15, .
2. J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2016 Dec;25(6):753-7.
3. Obstet Gynecol. 2017 Oct;130(4):778-82.
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Severe Maternal Morbidity in the United States.
5. Guttmacher Rep Public Policy. 2018;21:41-7.
6. “International ‘safe abortions by mail’ service can now ship to women in US,” The Hill, Nov 7, 2018.
Consider Ashley, a 22-year-old G3P2, 8 weeks pregnant, on Medicaid and living in rural Arkansas. The victim of intimate partner violence, she just broke up with her boyfriend and feels she does not have the financial or emotional resources to raise another child; she has no family in town to turn to and wants to be the best parent she can be to her 10-month-old and 3-year old.
In Arkansas, as in many other states and the District of Columbia, Medicaid covers abortion only for rape, incest, or danger to the woman’s life. Arkansas, as well as many other states, requires women to wait 48 hours following counseling before they can proceed with abortion. Waiting periods exacerbate Ashley’s tenuous situation. Will her boss give her time off from work? How will she get to the clinic? Who will watch her children? And lost wages and greater expenses are not the only problems she faces. Arkansas requires a legal contract between the abortion provider and a physician with hospital admitting privileges to provide medical abortion. The result: Only one clinic in Arkansas can legally provide medical abortion for its entire female population. For our impoverished young mother of two, the best choice is the most difficult. And she is far from alone.
Since 2010, many states have passed numerous laws restricting access to safe abortion. As geography plays a growing role in determining access, women and health care providers actively seek ways to circumvent barriers. Telemedicine, initially designed to expedite primary care for patients whose access was hampered by Boston traffic, now brings quality health care to areas lacking providers.1 Telemedicine works for a variety of medical services, from prescribing antibiotics to performing neurosurgery; reproductive health care is part of this digital revolution.2 In 2008, Iowa’s Planned Parenthood of the Heartland began using telemedicine to offer medical abortion.3
As approved by the Food and Drug Administration, medical abortion is the termination of a pregnancy of up to 10 weeks’ gestation using a combination of mifepristone and misoprostol, the former taken to block progesterone receptors, the latter to cause expulsion of the pregnancy. Today, about a third of all abortions in the United States are medical abortions. Because current FDA regulations require that mifepristone be dispensed by a physician, patients usually receive the medications after an in-person evaluation by a health care provider in a clinic.
Two models of telemedicine could improve access for Ashley.
In the first, like the Iowa Planned Parenthood model, remote clinic staff evaluate patients with history and physical examination, ultrasonography, and hemoglobin measurement; the information is forwarded to an off-site physician who has a video discussion with the patient and remotely dispenses the medication for eligible candidates. Between 2008 and 2015, Iowa Planned Parenthood provided 8,765 medical abortions using this model.3 Clinically adverse events, such as hospital admission, surgery, blood transfusion, and death occurred in 16 (0.18%) with no ectopic pregnancies or death.3 For comparison, the rate of severe maternal morbidity in the United States is 1.4%, approximately 10 times the rate with this model of medical abortion.4
In the second model of fully self-managed telemedicine abortion, patients complete a checklist that is reviewed by a provider who sends the medications through the mail. For safety, women must be able to determine their eligibility through the checklist, manage the medications, and self-assess for abortion completion. The World Health Organization endorses self-managed abortion as an option when there is “a source of accurate information and access to a health care provider should they need or want it at any stage of the process.”5 Women on Web, an organization that has provided telemedicine abortion to women globally, has recently begun providing services to the United States after sweeping restrictions vastly increased the number of requests from U.S. women. The U.S. service, Aid Access, operates similarly and for $95 provides online consultation, shipping of the medications, and Skype or phone calls for questions.6
Self-managed abortion has a bad reputation, in part from anti-abortion activists who seek to punish women who attempt to end their pregnancies themselves, but also because of its association with pre–Roe v. Wade “back alley” unsafe abortions. Neither perspective recognizes the benefits of safe self-managed abortion. Some states have criminalized self-induced abortion; both the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association have voiced opposition to such laws to ensure that women do not fear prosecution for seeking medical care for complications.
Given the landscape of abortion access in the United States, where legal constraints, lack of insurance, and a dearth of providers may create insurmountable barriers, we support self-managed abortion for the following reasons:
- Access barriers: The complexity and number of legal restrictions to abortion care have made it unavailable/unaffordable through traditional clinic visits in many parts of the United States. With the addition of Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, restrictions are likely to increase.
- Safety: The evidence-based assessment of the World Health Organization is that in-person clinical evaluation is unnecessary if the appropriate checklists, educational information, and access to a provider are available.
- Autonomy and equity: Even without the barriers mentioned above, self-managed telemedicine abortion remains a patient-centered option. Often more accessible and less expensive, inherently more private, it is bound to appeal to many women.
This decade has seen unprecedented challenges to comprehensive safe reproductive health care, with no relief in sight. In the decades prior to Roe v. Wade, illegal abortions were responsible for 20% of all maternal mortality in the United States. As government, national medical organizations, and the public become more aware of our intolerably high maternal mortality rate, these actors are increasingly driven to bring our maternal health to parity with our industrialized peers. Restricting access to safe abortion runs counter to that goal. Two hundred forty years of American history teach us that legal restrictions do not prevent abortions, because they do not eliminate the reasons for which women seek abortion. Legal restrictions do, however, prevent women from ending pregnancies in the safest manner possible. The inability to obtain safe abortions invariably leads to dead women – our mothers, daughters, sisters, and wives. In this country’s harsh political climate, we must protect a woman’s right to choose. By advocating for innovative approaches to protect women’s reproductive choices, we empower women and save lives.
Dr. Anwar is an obstetrician/gynecologist at Michigan State University in Flint and Dr. Espey is professor and chair of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Neither of them have conflicts of interest. Email them at obnews@mdedge.com.
References
1. “How a ‘Stupid Idea’ Gave Birth to Telemedicine,” MedPageToday. Dec 15, .
2. J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2016 Dec;25(6):753-7.
3. Obstet Gynecol. 2017 Oct;130(4):778-82.
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Severe Maternal Morbidity in the United States.
5. Guttmacher Rep Public Policy. 2018;21:41-7.
6. “International ‘safe abortions by mail’ service can now ship to women in US,” The Hill, Nov 7, 2018.