Current:Home > NewsA Trump-appointed Texas judge could force a major abortion pill off the market -FinanceMind
A Trump-appointed Texas judge could force a major abortion pill off the market
View
Date:2025-04-16 02:58:42
A case before a federal judge in Texas could dramatically alter abortion access in the United States – at least as much, some experts say, as the U.S. Supreme Court's Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision last year, which overturned decades of abortion-rights precedent.
A decision is expected soon in the case challenging the Food and Drug Administration's approval more than 20 years ago of the abortion drug mifepristone, which a growing number of patients use to terminate pregnancies.
Jenny Ma, senior counsel with the Center for Reproductive Rights, says the outcome of the suit brought by a coalition of individuals and groups opposed to abortion - could amount to a "nationwide ban on medication abortion" with a greater impact than Dobbs.
"That decision left the decision about abortion up to the states," Ma says, "but this would be one court in Texas deciding whether or not medication abortion could be allowed across this country, even in states that have protected abortion since the Dobbs decision."
Tiny pill, big impact
Medication abortion — as opposed to a surgical procedure — is now the most common way that people terminate pregnancies. That's especially true in the first trimester when the vast majority of abortions occur. Abortion pills are increasingly relied on by people who live in places where access to clinics is limited by state laws or geography.
While various regimens exist for terminating pregnancies with pills, the gold standard for medication abortion in the United States is a two-drug protocol that includes mifepristone and another, less-regulated drug, misoprostol.
But now, a coalition led by the anti-abortion rights group Alliance Defending Freedom has filed a lawsuit in federal court in Texas asking a judge to reverse that approval.
Revisiting a decades-old drug approval
The anti-abortion group is raising questions about the FDA's approval process in 2000 and some of the rule changes that have been made since then. They note that under President Biden, the FDA now allows mifepristone to be mailed or dispensed by retail pharmacies, while it used to be subject to more layers of restriction.
"They've loosened the requirements again, and again, and again," says Denise Harle, senior counsel with Alliance Defending Freedom. "So now, mifepristone is being given to women who have never even seen a physician in person."
Under the recent rule changes, it's now possible for patients to receive a prescription through telehealth in states where that's legal, an option that major medical groups support.
One judge, national implications
Normally, as the FDA has noted in its defense of its approval process, it would be unusual to pull a drug from the market after more than two decades of widespread safe and effective use.
That decision is now up to a federal judge in Texas, Matthew Kacsmaryk — a Trump appointee with longstanding affiliations with the religious right, including work as an attorney with a conservative Christian legal group based in the state.
"It's no accident that the complaint was filed in Amarillo, says Elizabeth Sepper, a University of Texas at Austin law professor.
"The way the district courts in Texas dole out cases makes it so that there are a few places where you pretty much know which judge you're going to get," Sepper says. "So they know they have a very sympathetic ear."
Any appeals in the case would go to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit – widely known as a conservative jurisdiction – and then to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Not just red states
If Judge Kacsmaryk sides with the anti-abortion group, mifepristone would have to be pulled from the market, at least temporarily. The FDA could choose to restart the approval process, which could take years.
Jenny Ma stresses that because this is a federal case, the impact could be felt nationwide, not only in states with abortion bans.
"After Dobbs, it almost seemed like there were two Americas – where abortion access was allowed in some states and not in others," Ma says. "This would amount to a nationwide ban on medication abortion, and patients who seek this care would not be able to get this care from any pharmacy, or any prescriber or any provider."
The judge has allowed additional time for the plaintiffs to respond to a brief filed by the drug's manufacturer. Sometime after that deadline, Feb. 24, the judge is expected to issue a decision or schedule a hearing.
veryGood! (9252)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Ryan Phillippe Shares Hot Throwback Photo With Ex Reese Witherspoon
- Nicki Minaj apologizes for postponed concert after incident in Amsterdam
- To Incinerate Or Not To Incinerate: Maryland Hospitals Grapple With Question With Big Public Health Implications
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Connecticut Sun star Alyssa Thomas ejected for hard foul on Chicago Sky's Angel Reese
- The best moments from Bill Walton's broadcasting career
- Horoscopes Today, May 25, 2024
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Diplomatic efforts for Israel-Hamas hostage talks expected to resume next week, sources say
Ranking
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- 12 people injured after Qatar Airways plane hits turbulence on flight to Dublin
- Mike Tyson ‘doing great’ after falling ill during weekend flight from Miami to Los Angeles
- Military labs do the detective work to identify soldiers decades after they died in World War II
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Tennessee leads NCAA baseball tournament field. Analyzing the College World Series bracket, schedule
- American arrested for bringing ammo to Turks and Caicos released, others await sentencing
- Johnny Wactor, 'General Hospital' actor, shot and killed at 37: Reports
Recommendation
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
Armenians, Hmong and other groups feel US race and ethnicity categories don’t represent them
Social media reacts to news of Bill Walton's passing: One of a kind. Rest in peace.
$15 Big Macs: As inflation drives up fast food prices, map shows how they differ nationwide
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Ashton Kutcher, Mila Kunis and Their 2 Kids Make Rare Appearance at WNBA Game With Caitlin Clark
Mavs rookie center Dereck Lively II leaves Game 3 of West finals after taking knee to head
Building your retirement savings? This 1 trick will earn you exponential wealth