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- <text id=93TT1892>
- <link 93TO0123>
- <title>
- June 14, 1993: But Will It End The Abortion Debate?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 14, 1993 The Pill That Changes Everything
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER
- HEALTH, Page 52
- But Will It End The Abortion Debate?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Protesters will have a hard time finding targets, but they won't
- give up
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--With reporting by Adam Biegel/Atlanta, Julie Johnson/Washington,
- Frederick Painton/Paris and Janice C. Simpson/New York
- </p>
- <p> Take an abortion clinic. Draw some protesters around it. Someone
- holding a sign with a fetus on it. Someone else, perhaps, holding
- a real fetus.
- </p>
- <p> Add the miracle drug: the protesters disappear. So do the signs,
- the fetus. Why? Because the clinic, too, is gone, replaced by
- the privacy of thousands of anonymous doctors' offices. That,
- say some, is the elementary physics of RU 486.
- </p>
- <p> Although the philosophical center of the abortion debate has
- always been the woman and what was going on in her womb, its
- public center was the doctor who performs abortions and what
- was going on in his clinic. RU 486, its adherents hope, will
- permit medicine to achieve what politics has made problematic:
- allowing the issue of abortion to be a private matter between
- a woman and her doctor. "You can't stop a woman from visiting
- a doctor," a securities analyst who follows the drug industry
- told the Wall Street Journal. "It becomes a private transaction.
- And that's the end of the abortion battle." Congressman Ron
- Wyden of Oregon claims that once the drug arrives, "it will
- no longer be possible for these extremists to target centralized
- locations like clinics." Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe,
- grimly alluding to the murder earlier this year of an abortion
- doctor in Florida, says, "You won't know whom to kill. You won't
- know where to lie down."
- </p>
- <p> With the arrival of RU 486 in the U.S.--especially in a form
- that requires the woman merely to take pills rather than also
- get a shot--the vision of some pro-choice advocates, that
- the drug could abort the abortion debate, will be tested. Will
- antiabortion activists find ways to restrict the availability
- of the abortion pill? And if not, will RU 486 really obviate
- the clinics and confound the picketers?
- </p>
- <p> Jerry Falwell sits in the chancellor's office of Liberty University,
- his school in Lynchburg, Virginia, and describes his abhorrence
- of RU 486. The host of the Old Time Gospel Hour on 200 television
- stations, he still has the contacts and much of the clout that
- he enjoyed in his Moral Majority days. He compares unprotesting
- acceptance of the new drug to the German churches' inaction
- during the Holocaust: "We can't make that mistake again," he
- says. "Morally we will have no recourse except to do whatever
- is available to us."
- </p>
- <p> Peg Yorkin sits in the high-tech Los Angeles office of the Feminist
- Majority Foundation, an organization she co-founded and into
- which she has poured $10 million. Her worth has been estimated
- at up to $100 million. The RU 486 "genie" is "out of the bottle,"
- she says. To get it to American women, "we are prepared to do
- whatever we have to do."
- </p>
- <p> In the middle, until recently, was the drug's producer, France's
- Roussel Uclaf. Its corporate parent, Germany's huge Hoechst
- chemical company, feared a pro-life boycott of its American
- products if it allowed RU 486 to be marketed in the U.S. And
- Yorkin threatened a pro-choice boycott if it didn't. In the
- face of this dilemma and some badgering by the FDA, the company
- did what a typically cautious multinational would: it passed
- its burden (or tried to, anyway) onto the shoulders of someone
- else, in this case the nonprofit Population Council.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, the council convened a round-table meeting with
- a diverse group of women's health organizations to discuss the
- socioeconomic mix of the participants in the upcoming RU 486
- trials. It was the first of many such planning sessions. The
- council, which has not yet finished raising the $4 million it
- will need to complete the testing, says the trials will involve
- at least 2,000 women who will probably be a "representative
- sampling" by race and age. The subjects will not receive injected
- prostaglandin, but skip right to the new all-pill version. Above
- all, the council will act deliberately. "When there is something
- to explain, we will explain it," says a spokeswoman wearily.
- "It's just that there is nothing more to say now."
- </p>
- <p> The RU 486 ball is in the council's court, and it can control
- the speed of play. The FDA cannot rule on the pill until the
- council has filed a new-drug application, and the council cannot
- file until it has run its tests and found a U.S. manufacturer.
- But there is reason to believe that once an application has
- been filed, the agency will do its utmost to streamline the
- process. It was, after all, FDA chief David Kessler, a Bush
- holdover kept on by Clinton, who persuaded Roussel Uclaf to
- allow its drug to be reviewed for use in the U.S. market. And
- it is Kessler's aggressive advocacy--plus the relative impregnability
- of large agencies like the FDA to public pressure--that has
- convinced even so devoted a foe as Gary Bauer, an antiabortion
- leader and former Reagan policy czar, that "if the Administration
- is intent on bringing RU 486 into the country...they can
- do it."
- </p>
- <p> Not all Bauer's allies are so fatalistic, however. The American
- Life League has developed a six-point strategy for opposing
- the pills, including protest rallies, calls for government investigations
- and plans for deluging the FDA with mail. Pennsylvania Governor
- Robert Casey, perhaps the country's highest-profile pro-life
- Democrat, wonders if Kessler's enthusiasm for the new pills
- could backfire. "The U.S. government is guilty of a flagrant
- abuse of its authority" in this case, he says. "The FDA should
- not be an advocate for a drug that hasn't been tested here."
- He speculates that pro-lifers might use the alleged conflict
- of interest as the basis for a legal suit enjoining the drug's
- introduction until the FDA can prove its objectivity.
- </p>
- <p> On the state level, the right-to-life forces will no doubt fight
- for the same kind of regulations already used to limit surgical
- abortions: mandatory counseling, parental consent for minors
- and a required waiting period--maybe an extensive one, after
- the French model. Such regulations might help ease qualms about
- the pill among the people who make up the vast conflicted middle
- ground in the abortion debate: those who support a woman's right
- to choose yet might worry that a pill could, in some cases,
- lead to choices that are too hasty or unreflective.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, the political debate will certainly make it more
- difficult to find an American company willing to distribute
- the drug. After the pill appeared in France, opponents sent
- 1.5 million critical postcards to Hoechst's U.S. subsidiary,
- Hoechst Celanese, and they will inevitably call a boycott against
- all products of any company that gets into the RU 486 business.
- And that's just the first volley. "Do you think the pharmaceutical
- corporate executive wants someone picketing in his neighborhood?"
- asks the Rev. Patrick Mahoney, spokesman for Operation Rescue.
- </p>
- <p> Aware of such potential problems, the pill's inventor, Dr. Etienne-Emile
- Baulieu, is leading his own effort to establish a nonprofit
- foundation that would set up a new company both to manufacture
- and distribute RU 486 worldwide. Since the pill would be its
- only product, he says, the boycott threat would evaporate. The
- Population Council has expressed a willingness to discuss the
- plan with him.
- </p>
- <p> When the pill finds a maker, how will it reach the taker? Its
- proponents, especially those hoping to make the clinic protesters
- vanish, agree that France's tightly controlled distribution
- method was devised, as a New England Journal of Medicine editorial
- put it, "for political rather than scientific reasons." One
- common yet radical suggestion is that RU 486 and prostaglandin
- could be sold to women as prescription drugs and taken at home.
- "To even suggest that you could do that is ridiculous," protests
- Judie Brown, president of the American Life League. That sentiment
- finds some support even from Baulieu. He opposes distribution
- by prescription because of what he calls "the cousin syndrome"--the woman for whom the drug was prescribed might pass it
- on to a cousin or friend, who has not had a gynecological exam.
- In rare cases, that woman may be having undetected problems,
- such as a tubal pregnancy, a potentially lethal complication
- that the pills would not halt.
- </p>
- <p> Baulieu does, however, believe the pill could be administered
- by gynecologists outside of a clinic environment. He supports
- the "two-visit" plan: the woman is examined, takes the first
- set of pills, goes home, takes the second two days later, and
- returns to the doctor to make sure the process has been completely
- effective. Advocates of this method make two assumptions about
- the woman: that she will have the emotional fortitude to go
- through an experience on her own, and that she will get to a
- hospital if she becomes one of the rare cases where there is
- excess bleeding or other complications. Lynne Randall, director
- of an Atlanta abortion clinic that has volunteered to be an
- RU 486 test site, sees no long-term obstacle: "The supervision
- would be a doctor's saying, `I'm on call. If you get bad cramps,
- call me and I'll meet you in my office or at the hospital.' "
- </p>
- <p> Randall and other would-be pioneers are also making a scientific
- assumption: that if a woman takes the first set of pills but
- neglects the second, and her pregnancy comes to term, the child
- will be normal. For years RU 486 opponents have warned of Thalidomide-like
- tragedies, "the absence of hands, a foot grown out of a knee,"
- as one spokesman put it. Baulieu and other informed advocates
- argue that this is chemically impossible; that in the handful
- of known cases where RU 486 did not stop pregnancy, the children
- born were all healthy.
- </p>
- <p> If the process could be as simple as Baulieu and Randall suggest,
- private physicians, who have shunted off the majority of abortions
- on clinics, might be willing to perform them again. "I think
- a lot more private physicians would quietly give RU 486 in their
- practices," says Susan Hill, head of the National Women's Health
- Network. "It wouldn't happen overnight, but if they felt it
- was safe and they weren't going to be protested every day, I
- think they would start offering it to their patients...It's
- a lot easier to protest 400 clinics than 10,000 doctors."
- </p>
- <p> Not so, says Joseph Scheidler, author of Closed: 99 Ways to
- Stop Abortion. "We will probably know which physicians are dispensing
- it," he warns. "We'll send in women to ask for RU 486...There will be doctors who will not deal with it." For those
- who do, "we'll go to their homes, to their offices, to their
- hospitals." Bonnie Quirke, president of the Illinois Right to
- Life Federation, promises "a massive educational effort with
- physicians and pharmacists."
- </p>
- <p> The two to three years needed for testing and approval of RU
- 486 could delay its debut until the middle of the next presidential-election
- campaign. And as Jerry Falwell is happy to conjecture, "I think
- RU 486 will be a major issue in the campaign if it is not yet
- distributed." His goal, he says, will be to elect a leader "with
- different morals than the President." The lifers will talk about
- death that hides in the palm of a hand; the choicers about empowerment
- a woman can hold between two fingers. Although the advent of
- RU 486 could greatly change the nature of the abortion debate,
- it is unlikely to make it go away.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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