RU-486 pill to improve abortion access in Waterloo Region - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 12:25 AM | Calgary | -7.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

RU-486 pill to improve abortion access in Waterloo Region

Pharmacists in Waterloo Region could be handing out abortion drug RU-486 as early as next year according to Linepharma International Limited, the company that manufactures the pill.
Health Canada announced on Thursday that it had approved abortion drug RU-486 for prescription use. (Charlie Neibergall/Associated Press)

Pharmacists in Waterloo Region could be handing out abortion drug RU-486 as early as next year according to Linepharma International Limited, the company that manufactures the pill.

After a review process that lasted more than two years, Health Canada announced on Thursday that it had approved the drug for prescription use.

"It reduces the barriers for women to access their reproductive choices," Lyndsey Butcher, executive director at Planned Parenthood Waterloo Region, told CBC.

Until now, Butcher saidwomen in the region have had two abortion options. They could either have a surgical abortion at the clinic in Kitchener, or they could go to Toronto for a medicatedabortion.

"That was a real barrier for women," she said, "because, when you have a medication abortion, you need to have a follow up afterwards. So, it required two trips to Toronto for them to access abortion there."

Recommended by the World Health Organization

Butcher said RU-486 has been available for about 25 years in European countries such as France, and also in Britain.

"It's unclear to us why...we're decades behind the rest of the world," she said. "This type of abortion is 98 per cent effective. It's actually recommended as the most effective kind of abortion by the World Health Organization."

The drugwhich is actually a two-drug combination of mifepristone and misoprostolworks by essentially inducing a miscarriage.

First, a woman will take mifepristone, which blocks the production of progesterone, a hormone that prepares the uterine lining for pregnancy. Then, a day or two later, she will take misoprostol, which causes contractions.

"Normally, the miscarriage happens within the first 24 hours after taking the medication," Butcher said, "but there can be some bleeding and spotting that lasts about nine to 16 days."

She says most women can return to their normal routinesafter a day or two.