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- <text id=94TT1699>
- <title>
- Dec. 05, 1994: Society:Abortion Pills On Trial
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 05, 1994 50 for the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 45
- Abortion Pills on Trial
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> After years of controversy and delay, the drugs that can end
- a pregnancy without surgical intervention are being tested in
- Des Moines and other American cities
- </p>
- <p>By Andrea Sachs/Des Moines, Iowa
- </p>
- <p> "I was the first one in Des Moines. Everyone was really excited
- on Wednesday, when I was given the first dose of medication.
- I made a joke that we should have a ribbon-cutting ceremony.
- They kept telling me I was making history.
- </p>
- <p> "I was very nauseous in a couple of hours. I threw up constantly
- for three days. I went to work. Luckily, there's a restroom
- in my department. I moved a little slower. Usually I'm very
- upbeat, but I wasn't for those three days. It was like food
- poisoning. I couldn't keep anything down.
- </p>
- <p> "I went in on Friday and took the second dose of medication.
- After 15 minutes there was a tiny bit of cramping, but less
- than menstrual cramps. After two hours the cramps got stronger,
- and I started using a heating pad on my belly. I went to the
- restroom. When I started to stand up, it was like a faucet turned
- on. There was a steady stream of blood. I passed a golfball-size
- blood clot that scared me. I thought maybe it was the fetus.
- </p>
- <p> "The cramps stayed steady. In the last 15 minutes of my appointment,
- I was doubled over. The bleeding was very heavy, heavier than
- a period. My mom drove me home. By this time, I was bleeding
- severely, and I had diarrhea. It reminded me of the way you
- bleed after you give birth. Maybe a woman that hasn't given
- birth might be a little more distressed.
- </p>
- <p> "I aborted at 6:30 on Friday night. I heard it fall into the
- toilet. It looked like a blood clot. I cried when I knew it
- had passed--partly from relief, partly from sadness. I knew
- it was over."
- </p>
- <p>-- Patient 001
- </p>
- <p> At the Planned Parenthood clinic in Des Moines, Iowa, they are
- known simply as "the M& M trials" because of the two drugs involved:
- mifepristone and misoprostol. But the breezy nickname fails
- to convey either the scientific significance or the social controversy
- surrounding the U.S. clinical trials of the so-called abortion
- pill. Although an estimated 150,000 women in Europe have used
- mifepristone (known there by its brand name, RU 486), the threat
- of consumer boycotts by antiabortion organizations discouraged
- Roussel Uclaf, the drug's European manufacturer, from marketing
- the pills in America. Instead, the company eventually agreed
- to let the Population Council, a nonprofit group, sponsor clinical
- trials of mifepristone in the U.S. Last month tests began at
- some of the 12 sites around the country, five of them Planned
- Parenthood clinics. Based on the results of these trials--which will involve 2,100 volunteers nationwide--the Food and
- Drug Administration will decide whether to approve the drug.
- </p>
- <p> Patient 001, a 30-year-old blue-collar worker, was not an obvious
- candidate to become an abortion pioneer. "I was brought up in
- a Christian home," she told TIME. "My family was pro-life, so
- I always said `I could never do that.'" But by the time Planned
- Parenthood of Greater Iowa announced on Oct. 27 that it was
- looking for volunteers, she found herself pregnant and desperate.
- Married, with two children and "a complicated domestic situation"
- she prefers not to discuss, Patient 001 and her husband decided
- that she should take part in the trials. "I was terrified of
- a surgical abortion because of a friend's bad experience," she
- says.
- </p>
- <p> The Des Moines clinic reports no shortage of women willing to
- try the pills, which are free during the trial. (Eventually,
- a mifepristone abortion is expected to cost about the same as
- a surgical procedure.) In fact, inquiries have been coming in
- from as far away as New Jersey. To qualify, a woman must be
- over 18, in good health and less than 63 days away from her
- last menstrual period.
- </p>
- <p> On her first visit to the clinic last week, Amy, 23, was given
- a medical checkup that included a Pap smear, breast exam and
- pregnancy test. Then a counselor took her through a series of
- questions about her health and her decision to have an abortion,
- and explained the M& M procedure in detail. When it was time
- to sign a six-page consent form, Amy did not hesitate. "Not
- even for half a second" did she and her husband think about
- having the baby, she says. "We've known for over two years that
- two children were enough for us." Amy was then handed three
- mifepristone tablets, which look like slightly oversize aspirin,
- and a paper cup of water. For her, the decision to take the
- pills rather than undergo a surgical abortion was easy. "It's
- much more simple," she says. "To me, it sounds a lot less traumatic."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the M& M process can be far more taxing than a surgical
- abortion, which lasts for about 15 minutes, with a recovery
- time of roughly one day. The first dose of mifepristone, which
- overrides the pregnancy hormones and breaks down the lining
- of the uterus, usually produces only minor side effects such
- as nausea, headaches, weakness and fatigue. But two days later
- the patient returns to the clinic for a dose of misoprostol,
- which causes contractions of the uterus to expel the fertilized
- egg. This stage of the procedure can be painful, messy and protracted.
- Women are required to stay under observation at the clinic for
- four hours. Recalls Angie, an unmarried 20-year-old with two
- children: "I started to bleed like menstruation. But nothing
- really happened until the next day. I was having deep cramping
- when I went to the bathroom, and it was like turning a water
- jug upside down. I looked at the fetus and was disgusted. I
- flushed before I got sick to my stomach." She then had to return
- to the clinic 12 days later for an exam that would ensure that
- the abortion was complete. (The pills fail to completely expel
- the fetus in 4% of cases, and a surgical abortion is necessary.)
- </p>
- <p> "This requires more of a time commitment than surgery. It's
- a lengthy process," says Jill June, the president of Planned
- Parenthood of Greater Iowa. "And women will be dealing with
- blood that, in a surgical abortion, only medical professionals
- would see." Yet for a variety of reasons women are glad to have
- an alternative to surgical abortion. For one thing, M& M can
- be done sooner in the pregnancy than surgery, which is usually
- performed after seven weeks. There is no anesthesia involved
- with M& M, and little risk of infection or perforation of the
- uterus. "This is more natural for the body," says Theresa, 32,
- a divorced mother of four. "It's working with the body." Stephanie,
- a single 19-year-old who has never been pregnant before, agrees.
- "I didn't like abortion and I said I'd never have one. These
- were just pills," she said, after her first dose. "This was
- just like being at the doctor's."
- </p>
- <p> For now, the M& M volunteers have been spared the gauntlet of
- antiabortion protesters who had at one time routinely picketed
- and blockaded the Des Moines clinic. A year ago, a judge ordered
- Operation Rescue to stay away from the facility, which has been
- guarded by U.S. Marshals since Dr. John Britton was shot in
- Pensacola, Florida, in July. But June is worried that this may
- be "the calm before the storm." Two weeks ago, local antiabortion
- activists met to strategize against the M& M trials.
- </p>
- <p> By last week, 50 patients at the Des Moines clinic had become
- part of the national trials. For Patient 001 it was "a positive
- experience. I don't think any kind of termination of an unwanted
- pregnancy is easy. But the pills seem to me to be a lot less
- traumatic." Planned Parenthood expects many other women to agree.
- "The scientific genie is out of the bottle," says June. "This
- technology is available to the women of Europe. Now the women
- of America will be satisfied with nothing less."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-