California anti-abortion group sues to protect access to ‘abortion pill reversal’

A San Diego-based Catholic nonprofit filed a lawsuit this week against California Attorney General Rob Bonta that seeks to protect access to a treatment that’s said to reverse medication-induced abortions if taken quickly enough.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in San Diego, is a response to a state lawsuit Bonta filed last year alleging that a national anti-abortion group and five crisis pregnancy centers in Northern California were using “false and misleading statements” to advertise and promote what they call “abortion pill reversal,” or APR.

The federal lawsuit seeks an injunction against Bonta’s efforts to sue the crisis pregnancy centers, alleging that the attorney general is violating their First Amendment rights.

“Bonta has no business butting into the intimate medical decision of an expectant mother, in consultation with the medical professional of her choice, to carry her pregnancy to term and save her unborn baby from the disastrous effects of mifepristone while there is still time to undo the effects of that powerful chemical,” the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of the Catholic nonprofit Culture of Life Family Services, which operates COLFS Medical Clinic at three locations in San Diego County, by attorneys from the Thomas More Society, which has often represented religious groups in cases involving abortion and same-sex marriage issues.

“Attorney General Rob Bonta refuses to recognize a woman’s right to reverse an abortion in progress when she has changed her mind about the procedure,” Peter Breen, the executive vice president and head of litigation at the Thomas More Society, said in a statement. “… In his quest to silence pregnancy help ministries, Bonta is violating Culture of Life Family Services’ right to speak and aid women in exercising their reproductive privacy rights.”

The fight over “abortion pill reversal” is centered around mifepristone, the first of two drugs typically prescribed to a person seeking to end an early pregnancy. Mifepristone works by blocking the important pregnancy hormone progesterone from being absorbed by the womb. The second pill, misoprostol, makes the uterus contract to complete the abortion.

An “abortion pill reversal” seeks to counteract the effects of mifepristone with a large influx of progesterone before the second pill is taken. The American Pregnancy Association says the reversal treatment is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration and is only effective within 24 hours of taking mifepristone.

Several reproductive and women’s health groups oppose the use of abortion reversal procedures, according to the American Pregnancy Association. That includes Planned Parenthood, Reproductive Freedom for All and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. The OB-GYN group calls abortion reversal procedures “unproven and unethical” because the few studies that have been undertaken involved too few subjects or ended early due to safety concerns.

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