Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Not based on science': US confronts abortion 'reversal' myths

EUR -
AED 3.783858
AFN 73.247803
ALL 98.29896
AMD 411.791644
ANG 1.85648
AOA 941.071044
ARS 1068.032987
AUD 1.661771
AWG 1.856898
AZN 1.754557
BAM 1.955779
BBD 2.079878
BDT 125.66867
BGN 1.955426
BHD 0.388305
BIF 3046.890294
BMD 1.030179
BND 1.410144
BOB 7.117856
BRL 6.218784
BSD 1.030189
BTN 88.417206
BWP 14.437847
BYN 3.371064
BYR 20191.510294
BZD 2.069178
CAD 1.484199
CDF 2956.613501
CHF 0.939549
CLF 0.03758
CLP 1036.94761
CNY 7.553169
CNH 7.570565
COP 4462.880072
CRC 520.984371
CUC 1.030179
CUP 27.299746
CVE 110.262763
CZK 25.089702
DJF 183.438059
DKK 7.460727
DOP 63.178105
DZD 139.8471
EGP 52.083487
ERN 15.452686
ETB 129.585571
FJD 2.399751
FKP 0.815883
GBP 0.837265
GEL 2.925504
GGP 0.815883
GHS 15.193692
GIP 0.815883
GMD 73.653623
GNF 8905.819292
GTQ 7.949839
GYD 215.515627
HKD 8.016547
HNL 26.187469
HRK 7.389378
HTG 134.48466
HUF 413.723007
IDR 16668.555328
ILS 3.768488
IMP 0.815883
INR 88.487744
IQD 1349.385718
IRR 43357.681317
ISK 145.214283
JEP 0.815883
JMD 161.52829
JOD 0.73081
JPY 163.032007
KES 133.397619
KGS 89.625552
KHR 4160.834794
KMF 492.476527
KPW 927.160611
KRW 1504.009869
KWD 0.317573
KYD 0.858391
KZT 541.594268
LAK 22456.762319
LBP 92245.623677
LKR 303.516788
LRD 192.626091
LSL 19.446494
LTL 3.041851
LVL 0.623145
LYD 5.092946
MAD 10.36999
MDL 19.190797
MGA 4876.948383
MKD 61.529349
MMK 3345.981521
MNT 3500.548436
MOP 8.256013
MRU 40.936964
MUR 48.181224
MVR 15.863974
MWK 1786.181095
MXN 21.128912
MYR 4.630608
MZN 65.838555
NAD 19.446494
NGN 1594.191392
NIO 37.909231
NOK 11.735357
NPR 141.465756
NZD 1.840476
OMR 0.396595
PAB 1.030089
PEN 3.888659
PGK 4.129876
PHP 60.08625
PKR 287.24386
PLN 4.262371
PYG 8125.913996
QAR 3.755424
RON 4.974423
RSD 117.115907
RUB 105.338426
RWF 1431.67095
SAR 3.867643
SBD 8.686782
SCR 14.704987
SDG 619.137828
SEK 11.493749
SGD 1.409445
SHP 0.815883
SLE 23.493123
SLL 21602.343687
SOS 588.693769
SRD 36.118592
STD 21322.627377
SVC 9.012905
SYP 2588.356136
SZL 19.427794
THB 35.637992
TJS 11.258872
TMT 3.605627
TND 3.304533
TOP 2.412778
TRY 36.448581
TTD 6.992926
TWD 33.922248
TZS 2575.410642
UAH 43.673938
UGX 3809.922693
USD 1.030179
UYU 44.969088
UZS 13329.858917
VES 55.408134
VND 26140.794577
VUV 122.304926
WST 2.846166
XAF 655.94369
XAG 0.034039
XAU 0.000385
XCD 2.784111
XDR 0.793292
XOF 655.950057
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.722567
ZAR 19.508929
ZMK 9272.851496
ZMW 28.610697
ZWL 331.717249
  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.3

    +0.88%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    46.77

    +1.69%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    8.21

    -2.44%

  • GSK

    -0.3400

    33.75

    -1.01%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.4

    -0.26%

  • NGG

    -0.6200

    57.98

    -1.07%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.1

    -0.56%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.22

    +0.28%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.63

    -0.97%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    58.63

    +0.75%

  • BCC

    -0.8200

    117.4

    -0.7%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    66.58

    -0.09%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    36.74

    -0.11%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.22

    0%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    31.12

    -2.28%

'Not based on science': US confronts abortion 'reversal' myths
'Not based on science': US confronts abortion 'reversal' myths / Photo: Stefani Reynolds - AFP

'Not based on science': US confronts abortion 'reversal' myths

Wracked by guilt after taking an abortion pill, a sobbing woman calls a US hotline. It recommends a "reversal" treatment to save the fetus -- despite medical warnings that it is potentially life-threatening.

Text size:

Misinformation about medical termination appears to have skyrocketed since last June, when the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that guaranteed a constitutional right to abortion.

That includes false "pro-life" posts on social media claiming abortion pills cause cancer and infertility -- as well as "pro-choice" content promoting dubious herbal treatments to terminate a pregnancy.

More striking, researchers say, is a wave of misleading content that promotes an unscientific treatment that promises to undo the effects of the first pill, mifepristone, in the two-drug regimen for medical abortion.

Anti-abortion advocates in the United States have heralded the so-called "reversal" treatment -- which involves taking the hormone progesterone -- for women who change their minds after taking mifepristone.

"Abortion pill reversal can help turn back the clock," reads the website for the Abortion Pill Rescue Network (APRN), a pro-life outfit that supports the treatment.

"When destructive voices would only say 'it is done,' abortion pill reversal says 'here is a second chance at life, just in time.'"

APRN's website lists anecdotal "success stories" -- emotional testimonies from women who opted for the treatment. Some, including a single mother identified as Shashana, broke down after taking the first pill, consumed with regret.

She reached out to APRN's hotline that got her started on the "reversal" procedure that her written testimony says saved her fetus.

What is not mentioned is the warning from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists (ACOG), an association of reproductive health specialists, that calls the treatment "unproven," "unethical" and "not based on science."

Also omitted is a 2019 medical trial by researchers from the University of California, Davis, to test the effectiveness of the "reversal" treatment. The trial had to be stopped prematurely after some participants experienced severe internal bleeding.

- 'Potential to harm' -

"The anecdotal 'success stories' often fail to acknowledge that there is no reputable medical evidence that taking progesterone to reverse the effects of mifepristone increases the likelihood of a pregnancy continuing," Anicka Slachta, a senior analyst at the watchdog NewsGuard, told AFP.

"Ultimately, omitting that context and presenting abortion pill 'reversal' as definitively safe and effective has the potential to cause harm."

When AFP requested APRN provide supporting data and interviews with the women cited under the "success stories," a publicist for Heartbeat International, an anti-abortion group that backs the network, replied.

She inquired what AFP's article intended to highlight but stopped responding thereafter.

When a US health misinformation researcher reached APRN's hotline posing as a pregnant woman, she was told the network had successfully saved 4,000 babies through the "reversal" treatment.

The hotline operator did not reveal the number of unsuccessful cases but mentioned a success rate of 64-68 percent, a statistic also cited on the network's website.

When the researcher -- who shared the audio recording with AFP -- pointed out that ACOG did not consider the treatment as safe, the operator dismissed the organization as "very pro-abortion," a stance that makes them "biased."

The operator said a prayer that she "make the right decision" -– that is, not carry out the abortion.

- 'Bodily autonomy' -

"What was clear in the call is that this group cares more about the life of the baby than the mother, point blank," the researcher told AFP, requesting anonymity for fear of online harassment.

"That was evident in the way they referred to the fetus but also through the omission of any real data about the risks."

In a report last week, the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) said thousands of "fake clinics" across the United States -- which seek to prevent "abortion-determined" people from accessing care -- collectively spent $10.2 million on Google search ads over the past two years.

Many of them, it said, promoted the "potentially dangerous" reversal procedure.

Research by the technology nonprofit Meedan Digital Health Lab shows that in the months after Roe v. Wade was overturned, online conversations about pill "reversals" were among three topics associated with abortion misinformation that saw a dramatic surge.

"It's not the idea of someone changing their mind on their own about having an abortion that's dangerous," Jenna Sherman, a program manager at the nonprofit, told AFP.

"It's pushing an unverified and potentially life-threatening intervention in an effort to be anti-abortion first and foremost over everything, rather than support people's bodily autonomy."

W.O.Ludwig--NZN