Women Look To Mexico For Abortion Drugs
But the providers say that
the pharmacies, which are largely unregulated, often fail to give proper
instructions for the drug, misoprostol, and that it does not always
give the women the result they seek.
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“I’m sure it’s always occurred, but we’re noticing it more,” said Kristeena Banda, the director of Whole Woman’s Health in McAllen,
one of two Rio Grande Valley abortion providers. “A few times a week,
women come in to ask for a pregnancy test. They’ve taken the pills, but
they’re still seeing symptoms of pregnancy.”
Misoprostol,
which requires a prescription in the United States, is used primarily
for ulcer prevention here and is not prescribed, on its own, for
abortions. American doctors and clinics do sometimes pair it with the
drug mifepristone (formerly known as RU-486) to produce a “medical
abortion,” a method considered more effective than using misoprostol by
itself. But the World Health Organization
has said that using misoprostol alone can be highly effective as an
abortion method, provided patients take the correct dosage within the
first nine weeks of gestation.![]()
And knowledge of what the correct
dosage is seems to be in short supply among the pharmacy workers
dispensing the drugs in northern Mexico. Researchers say that the
brand-name form of the medication, Cytotec, made by Pfizer, has been
available over the counter in Mexico since 1985 and that generic
versions have followed. The drug is available in many small, independent
pharmacies in the country, but the people selling it often lack
training. Because abortion is illegal outside the country’s capital
city, they are also wary of providing information on how misoprostol
should be used for that purpose.
Without proper instructions,
Banda said, her clinic’s patients have often ingested misoprostol in
varying amounts — some would take an entire bottle within days — based
on what friends or family had told them.
Dan Grossman, an obstetrician-gynecologist who is vice president for research at Ibis Reproductive Health
and an assistant professor at the University of California, San
Francisco, stressed that misoprostol was a safe drug when used properly,
for example to prevent bleeding during labor and to control uterine
contractions.
“The biggest risk for these women is that it’s not
going to be effective” at ending their pregnancies, he said. A woman for
whom the drug doesn’t work might well not know it, he added. “She could
potentially have a continuing pregnancy and not get a follow-up.”
Indeed, many health providers also say that women crossing into Mexico to buy misoprostol are ignoring important follow-up care.
Abortion-rights
advocates are concerned that a lack of awareness about clinical options
in the United States — as well as a lack of funds — could lead more
women to go underground and risk their health in this way. In 2011,
Texas lawmakers made deep cuts in financing for family planning for
low-income women. And a new law that requires a woman seeking an
abortion to receive a sonogram 24 hours ahead of the procedure — that
is, to make at least two visits to the abortion clinic — may be
prompting some to seek alternate abortion methods.
Women Banda
talked to who sought out misoprostol in Mexico, she said, were looking
for “the least invasive option, both medically and personally.”
She
added that it was likely that her clinic was seeing only a fraction of
the women who were using the drug. South Texas has a concentration of
immigrants who were born in Latin American countries, where
self-medication is a common practice and abortion is outlawed or
culturally stigmatized.
Mexico City legalized abortion in 2007,
but the historical lack of access throughout the country has contributed
to the popularity of misoprostol for its unlabeled use, especially in
poor areas where pharmacy regulations are largely unenforced, according
to a 2010 study in International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive
Health.
In July, at one of the many pharmacies lining the main
street in Nuevo Progreso, a town across the border from Weslaco, Jose
Alfredo Acosta was selling Cytotec for $153 per box. The package
contained 28 pills, each about 200 micrograms. The informational insert
did not include directions for self-induced abortion, but Acosta said he
knew that was why many women bought the medication.![]()
“If I see
that a girl is too young, I won’t sell it,” he said, citing stories he
had heard of girls hemorrhaging after using the pills. “I try my best to
explain the consequences, but there’s only so much I can do.”
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Like
many Progreso pharmacy workers, Acosta does not hold a pharmacy degree
or a license but is allowed under Mexican law to dispense Cytotec. Asked
about the proper dosage, he reluctantly suggested that patients take
one pill every two hours — 18 tablets in all.
According to the
World Health Organization, the recommended dosage of misoprostol, if
used alone for an abortion, should be four tablets (800 micrograms)
every three hours for a total of three doses, or 12 tablets.
Gabriel
Noguez, who works in a pharmacy down the street from Acosta and is also
untrained, said his shop sold Cytotec for $241.80 per box.
“It sells. That’s the problem,” he said. “But I won’t tell them how to take it. I just say, ‘You might have problems later.’"
Grossman
said he was concerned that the misoprostol issue was a symptom of the
barriers women faced in getting a legal abortion in the United States,
especially for those who were determined to end their pregnancies.
In
a 2010 study he published in the journal Reproductive Health Matters, a
30-year-old Texas woman reported that she started taking misoprostol in
her 13th week of pregnancy. She bled so badly that she had to be
admitted to a hospital.
The woman said cost was the factor behind her decision to try misoprostol instead of visiting a clinic. But she had no regrets.
“If I was put in the exact situation all over again,” she was quoted as saying, “I’d probably do it again.”
This story was made possible by a grant from Atlantic Philanthropies, and was produced as part of New America Media’s Women Immigrants Fellowship Program. It was also published in The New York Times.
Photos by Reynaldo Leal / The Texas Tribune
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