CVS and Walgreens will start selling mifepristone abortion pill this month
CVS and Walgreens will start dispensing mifepristone, one of the medications used to induce an abortion, in stores this month. The news was first reported by The New York Times. It comes more than a year after both retail pharmacy chains, the nation’s two largest, said they would pursue certification from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to dispense the pill. Medication abortions make up the majority of pregnancy terminations performed in the United States.
Initial Availability and Expansion
The chains will start dispensing mifepristone in a few states: CVS in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, and Walgreens in California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania. Eventually, both pharmacies will make it available in all states where abortion is legal and where they are permitted to do so. Neither chain will dispense the pill through the mail.
- CVS timelines: CVS pharmacies will begin filling prescriptions “in the weeks ahead,” said Amy Thibault, a company spokesperson.
- Walgreens timelines: Walgreens anticipates beginning to dispense mifepristone in the next week, per spokesperson Fraser Engerman.
Medical Safety and Usage
Mifepristone can be used in conjunction with another medication, misoprostol, to induce an abortion at home. A vast body of research shows it is safe and highly effective, particularly in the first trimester of pregnancy. Patients seeking mifepristone need a prescription from a medical provider. Misoprostol is already available in pharmacies for patients with a prescription.
Medical organizations including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists had long called for the change, noting the large body of medical evidence showing the drug’s safety.
Regulatory and Legal Context
Mifepristone received FDA approval more than 20 years ago, but the ability to dispense it has been tightly regulated — regulations stemming, physicians and researchers have said, from the political controversy associated with making the pill available. For years, the drug had to be dispensed in person and under the supervision of a specially certified clinician. But in recent years, regulators have pushed to make the drug more available. In January 2023, the FDA issued guidance that would allow brick-and-mortar pharmacies to provide the medication.
Since Roe v. Wade’s fall, medication abortion has emerged as a top target for the anti-abortion movement. The U.S. Supreme Court this month will hear a case challenging mifepristone’s availability. The high court is weighing a narrower set of questions: whether to block the 2016 FDA decision that allowed doctors to prescribe it virtually and that expanded approval of the drug.