A federal appeals court has restricted access to one of the most common means of abortion in the U.S. by blocking the mailing of prescriptions of mifepristone.
A panel of the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is requiring that the abortion pill be distributed only in person at clinics.
βEvery abortion facilitated by FDAβs action cancels Louisianaβs ban on medical abortions and undermines its policy that βevery unborn child is human being from the moment of conception and is, therefore, a legal person,ββ the ruling states.
Judges have long deferred to the Food and Drug Administrationβs judgments on the safety and appropriate regulation of drugs.
FDA officials under President Donald Trump have repeatedly stated the agency is conducting a new review of mifepristoneβs safety, at the direction of the president.
The judges noted in their ruling that the FDA βcould not say when that review might be complete and admitted it was still collecting data.β
In a court filing, Louisianaβs attorney general and a woman who says she was coerced into taking abortion pills requested that the FDA rules be rolled back to when the pills were allowed to be prescribed and dispensed only in person.
A Louisiana-based federal judge last month ruled that those allowances undermined the stateβs abortion ban but stopped short of undoing the regulations immediately.
Since the Supreme Courtβs 2022 ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade and allowed enforcement of abortion bans, prescriptions by mail have become a major way that abortions are provided β including to states where bans are in place.
βThis is going to affect patientsβ access to abortion and miscarriage care in every state in the nation,β said Julia Kaye, an ACLU lawyer. βWhen telemedicine is restricted, rural communities, people with low incomes, people with disabilities, survivors of intimate partner violence and communities of color suffer the most.β
Mifepristone was approved in 2000 as a safe and effective way to end early pregnancies. It is typically used in combination with a second drug, misoprostol.
Because of rare cases of excessive bleeding, the FDA initially imposed strict limits on who could prescribe and distribute the pill β only specially certified physicians and only after an in-person appointment where the person would receive the pill.
Both those requirements were dropped during the COVID-19 years. At the time, FDA officials under President Joe Biden said that after more than 20 years of monitoring mifepristone use, and reviewing dozens of studies involving thousands of women, it was clear that women could safely use the pill without direct supervision.
Fridayβs ruling sets up a likely appeal to the Supreme Court.
The conservative-majority high court overturned abortion as a nationwide right in 2022 but unanimously preserved access to mifepristone two years later.
That 2024 decision sidestepped the core issues, however, by ruling that the anti-abortion doctors behind the case didnβt have legal standing to sue.


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