撸奶社区

Skip to content

Louisiana鈥檚 new law on abortion drugs establishes risky treatment delays, lawsuit claims

BATON ROUGE, La.
8f50a8754526be0ae9ad2a8a0d8f5a5f4ef689bb0178ebe0f5202436e0bc15d4
FILE - Mifepristone tablets are seen in a Planned Parenthood clinic Thursday, July 18, 2024, in Ames, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) 鈥 Louisiana's new law categorizing two widely used abortion drugs as 鈥渃ontrolled dangerous substances鈥 was challenged in a state court lawsuit Thursday by a physician, a pharmacist and others who say the legislation sets up needless, dangerous delays in treatment during medical emergencies.

Although there already was a near-total abortion ban in Louisiana, including by medication, the reclassification of the drugs 鈥 mifepristone and misoprostol, which have other critical reproductive health care uses 鈥 went into effect earlier this month. Proponents of the law said more oversight and control over the drugs was needed to prevent coerced abortions. They have used as an example a Texas case in which a pregnant woman was given by her husband without her knowledge. The baby survived.

Doctors critical of the law have said it could harm patients facing emergency complications such as postpartum hemorrhages by requiring medical personnel to go through extra steps and more stringent storage requirements to use the drugs.

鈥淓ven short delays in accessing misoprostol can be life-threatening for postpartum hemorrhage patients,鈥 says the lawsuit. It says the law violates the Louisiana Constitution in multiple ways, including a prohibition on discrimination based on a person's physical condition.

Louisiana Attorney General Elizabeth Murrill said she had not seen the lawsuit as of Thursday afternoon. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 respond to a lawsuit we have not seen, but I鈥檓 confident this law is constitutional," she said in a statement. "We will vigorously defend it.鈥

In addition to the physician and the pharmacist, who the lawsuit says is pregnant, the plaintiffs in the case include the Birthmark Doula Collective, an organization of people trained to provide pregnancy care before, during and after birth.

Other plaintiffs include , a woman who was denied an abortion in Louisiana and traveled out of state for one after learning her fetus would not survive. A woman who said she was turned away from two emergency rooms instead of being treated for a miscarriage is also part of the lawsuit.

Prior to the reclassification, a prescription was still needed to obtain mifepristone and misoprostol in Louisiana. The new law reclassified the pills as 鈥淪chedule IV drugs,鈥 putting them in the same category as the opioid tramadol and other substances that can be addictive.

The new classification means that if someone knowingly possesses mifepristone or misoprostol without a valid prescription for any purpose, they could be fined up to $5,000 and sent to jail for one to five years.

The law carves out protections for pregnant women who obtain the drug without a prescription .

The legislation is a first-of-its-kind law in the U.S. While GOP Gov. Jeff Landry, many Republican lawmakers and anti-abortion groups have touted the new classification, doctors have that the law could cause.

Under the new classification, doctors say there are extra steps and more stringent storage requirements, which could slow access to the drugs in emergency situations. Beyond inducing abortions, the pills are also used to induce labor and stop hemorrhaging.

Prior to the law, some doctors said that misoprostol would be stored in a box in the hospital room, on the delivery table or in a nurse's pocket. But under the new requirements of the classification, the drugs may be down the hall in a locked container or potentially in-house pharmacy at smaller hospitals.

___

McGill reported from New Orleans.

Sara Cline And Kevin Mcgill, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks