In Post-Roe US, Patients Already Denied Care for Wide Range of Medical Concerns
The effect of abortion bans that have entered into force in at least 10 states since Roe v. Wade was overturned in late June is already reaching patients who need medication for a variety of health concerns, including pain management during IUD insertions and arthritis.
Dr. Alexandra Weiss Band, an obstetrician and gynecologist in New Orleans, filed an affidavit in the New Orleans Civil District Court on July 5 in a case challenging Louisiana’s law banning nearly all abortions, regarding her experience trying to fill a prescription for a patient who has having an IUD inserted.
As The New Orleans Advocate reported Sunday, Band prescribed Cytotec, a brand name of misoprostol, which is one of two pills prescribed for medication abortions. The drug softens the cervix, making it effective for inducing labor and inserting an IUD as well as for abortions.
The pharmacist at the Walgreens location where Band called in the prescription refused to dispense the medication even after the doctor told them what it was for.
“The response from Walgreens was that it would still not be filling the prescription because they could not be sure we weren’t prescribing this for an abortion, and so they will no longer dispense the drug,” Band’s affidavit read. “For obvious reasons, this is interfering with the best, medically appropriate care I can give to my patients.”
Band’s patient was just one person whose medical needs were not met due to the overturning of Roe. In addition to millions of people who no longer have access to abortion care unless they cross state lines—which Republicans also want to bar them from doing—autoimmune patients across the country are facing threats to their access to a commonly used medication.
Methotrexate is used by millions of people to treat lupus, arthritis, Crohn’s disease, cancer, and a number of other conditions. It can cause miscarriages in high doses, and about 2% of patients it’s prescribed to each year take it to treat ectopic pregnancies, in which the fertilized egg implants outside the uterus.
Embryos cannot survive an ectopic pregnancy, and the condition can be fatal for a pregnant patient if left untreated. Even though the abortion bans proposed in nearly two dozen states include exceptions for patients whose lives are at risk, medical experts say the legislation is so vaguely written it’s likely to cause doctors to hesitate before providing abortion care that is ostensibly still legal.
As the Los Angeles Times reported Monday, one pharmacist in Texas refused to dispense the medicine to an eight-year-old girl for juvenile arthritis, writing, “Females of possible child bearing potential have to have diagnosis on hard copy with state abortion laws.”
Eric Levitz of New York magazine called on Democrats to take action to address the chilling effect the end of Roe is already having on a wide variety of healthcare treatments.
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Julia Conley.