Health

Abortion Pills Obtained From Virtual Clinics Are Safe and Effective

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In-person exams often aren’t necessary for women to safely get a medication abortion, a new study of telemedicine visits suggests.

Researchers examined data on more than 6,000 people who received abortion pills from online clinics in 20 states and Washington, DC, between April 2021 and January 2022. Nearly all these abortions — 98 percent — required no follow-up care, and only 0.25 percent of patients experienced serious side effects, according to results published in the journal Nature Medicine.

“Medication abortion overall is extraordinarily effective and safe,” says Jennifer Karlin, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in family and community medicine at the University of California in Davis, who wasn’t involved in the new study. In fact, the outcomes seen with virtual visits, texting, and mailing medication in this study appeared even better than what typically happens with in-person care, Dr. Karlin says.

All the patients in the study received abortion pills after video visits or text messaging with virtual clinics. Patients who were beyond the nine-week gestational limit for the virtual clinics or who had risk factors for ectopic pregnancy (when the fertilized egg develops outside the uterus) were referred for in-person care and excluded from the study.

It’s possible that up to 18 percent of patients might be deemed ineligible for telehealth abortion pills because of the so-called “no test” criteria used in the study to screen patients who didn’t get in-person exams or ultrasounds, Karlin says.

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