The Prague Post - US abortion ruling threatens access to arthritis drug

EUR -
AED 4.164009
AFN 80.49961
ALL 98.8319
AMD 442.060898
ANG 2.043227
AOA 1039.587778
ARS 1328.560459
AUD 1.753476
AWG 2.040631
AZN 1.935955
BAM 1.961395
BBD 2.294444
BDT 138.063802
BGN 1.961395
BHD 0.428422
BIF 3380.141234
BMD 1.133684
BND 1.474506
BOB 7.852398
BRL 6.454741
BSD 1.136341
BTN 96.035925
BWP 15.472131
BYN 3.718908
BYR 22220.19905
BZD 2.282611
CAD 1.565215
CDF 3254.806016
CHF 0.932993
CLF 0.027986
CLP 1073.950112
CNY 8.243691
CNH 8.162618
COP 4839.298606
CRC 574.639053
CUC 1.133684
CUP 30.042616
CVE 110.58041
CZK 24.9116
DJF 202.357187
DKK 7.462756
DOP 66.740365
DZD 150.107153
EGP 57.357704
ERN 17.005254
ETB 152.061929
FJD 2.557473
FKP 0.854213
GBP 0.85295
GEL 3.106215
GGP 0.854213
GHS 15.965539
GIP 0.854213
GMD 81.059606
GNF 9843.075571
GTQ 8.751963
GYD 238.440107
HKD 8.786621
HNL 29.511175
HRK 7.531099
HTG 148.313036
HUF 403.95414
IDR 18589.180452
ILS 4.067315
IMP 0.854213
INR 95.697919
IQD 1488.64609
IRR 47742.253448
ISK 146.097856
JEP 0.854213
JMD 180.244113
JOD 0.804007
JPY 163.520828
KES 146.993176
KGS 99.140394
KHR 4552.986561
KMF 492.59474
KPW 1020.315249
KRW 1567.277969
KWD 0.347633
KYD 0.947001
KZT 587.064494
LAK 24573.090242
LBP 101818.4184
LKR 340.280588
LRD 227.27827
LSL 20.918566
LTL 3.347473
LVL 0.685754
LYD 6.204698
MAD 10.536955
MDL 19.545751
MGA 5160.720009
MKD 61.706005
MMK 2380.296558
MNT 4050.795815
MOP 9.072578
MRU 45.262102
MUR 51.389888
MVR 17.470522
MWK 1970.420263
MXN 22.220762
MYR 4.748434
MZN 72.556171
NAD 20.918566
NGN 1821.681845
NIO 41.819282
NOK 11.80574
NPR 153.657279
NZD 1.896471
OMR 0.436194
PAB 1.136341
PEN 4.166183
PGK 4.711439
PHP 62.94948
PKR 319.318899
PLN 4.275443
PYG 9091.933075
QAR 4.146828
RON 4.984579
RSD 117.535248
RUB 93.751127
RWF 1603.874759
SAR 4.251541
SBD 9.455407
SCR 16.107945
SDG 680.772798
SEK 10.903231
SGD 1.465518
SHP 0.890897
SLE 25.836712
SLL 23772.760366
SOS 649.452444
SRD 41.747917
STD 23464.96214
SVC 9.943362
SYP 14739.9442
SZL 20.909641
THB 37.399837
TJS 11.761347
TMT 3.967893
TND 3.409224
TOP 2.655198
TRY 43.727798
TTD 7.70598
TWD 33.7815
TZS 3060.229313
UAH 47.44553
UGX 4162.873836
USD 1.133684
UYU 47.686016
UZS 14658.811577
VES 98.333416
VND 29445.731634
VUV 137.280186
WST 3.14997
XAF 657.833349
XAG 0.03521
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.063836
XDR 0.818134
XOF 657.833349
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.35539
ZAR 20.814656
ZMK 10204.51626
ZMW 31.539962
ZWL 365.045665
  • RIO

    1.1500

    59.7

    +1.93%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.1

    +0.32%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    43.17

    -0.3%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • NGG

    0.0300

    71.68

    +0.04%

  • SCS

    0.2700

    10.14

    +2.66%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    39.07

    +0.82%

  • BCC

    3.4400

    96.15

    +3.58%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.07

    +0.46%

  • RBGPF

    67.2100

    67.21

    +100%

  • BP

    0.2400

    28.12

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.45

    +0.05%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    10.35

    +1.26%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    9.61

    -1.25%

  • AZN

    1.9300

    72.44

    +2.66%

  • RELX

    0.9400

    55.02

    +1.71%

US abortion ruling threatens access to arthritis drug
US abortion ruling threatens access to arthritis drug / Photo: Andy Buchanan - POOL/AFP/File

US abortion ruling threatens access to arthritis drug

When Alabama nurse Melissa went to pick up her regular prescription for rheumatoid arthritis last week, she was told the drug was "on hold" while the pharmacist checked she wasn't going to use it to induce an abortion.

Text size:

"He said, 'Well I have to verify if you're on any contraceptives to prevent pregnancy.' The hell you do," she recalled thinking.

Melissa -- who is in her early forties and asked to be identified only by her first name for fear that speaking out might affect her livelihood -- then called her doctor, who succeeded in having the pharmacy in the southern US state release the medicine.

"I picked it up a couple hours later, but I felt violated," she told AFP, explaining she had had a hysterectomy six years ago, and that her lack of recent contraceptive history may have led the pharmacist to suspect she was pregnant.

Stories of people facing similar struggles have come to light in the weeks since the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade on June 24, highlighting an overlooked consequence of new state-level bans or severe restrictions on abortion.

It's not yet clear how widespread the cases are, but national organizations including the Lupus Foundation of America and the American College of Rheumatology said they were aware of such concerns and asking people affected to come forward.

"The Arthritis Foundation supports unencumbered access to and coverage of FDA-approved drugs for managing arthritis in alignment with scientific and clinical guidelines, as well as evidence-based medical recommendations," the organization said.

The issue centers on methotrexate, a drug which tempers inflammation and is commonly used against autoimmune conditions including inflammatory arthritis, psoriasis and lupus.

Methotrexate stops cell division and is given in higher doses as a cancer drug.

It can also sometimes be used in medical abortions, though not as frequently as the Food and Drug Administration-approved combination of two other drugs, mifepristone and misoprostol.

Nevertheless, many states have passed laws carrying threats of legal action against health care workers and pharmacies providing methotrexate.

- 'It's terrifying' -

Another woman contacted by AFP, a 20-year-old university student from Ohio, said she has had a methotrexate prescription since 2020 to treat her lupus, which affects her kidney and liver and causes joint pain.

A pharmacist at a national chain told her they were "no longer accepting prescriptions for methotrexate unless it was for the FDA-approved use of (treating) breast cancer, or the patient was not presumably fertile," she said.

She tried again, without success, to fill her prescription at a family-owned pharmacy, and this week got a letter from her doctor's office stating the practice would no longer be prescribing methotrexate because of the number of patients having difficulty accessing it.

Though the first pharmacy later changed its position, the experience left her "annoyed and angry," she said.

A third woman, 48-year-old Jennifer Crow, a writer and produce gardener in Tellico Plains, Tennessee, told AFP she received an automated call from CVS saying her methotrexate refill had been declined "pending provider approval."

Crow said Methotrexate had helped her enormously in managing her inflammatory arthritis, allowing her to roll out of bed and get dressed without severe pain, and walk without a cane for the first time in years.

Though her doctor was able to resolve the situation, Crow, who has also had a hysterectomy, said she was worried for other chronic illness patients who didn't have the same access to resources that she does.

In statements to AFP, national pharmacy chains CVS and Walmart confirmed they were working to adhere to new state regulations in light of the high court's decision to revoke the constitutional right to an abortion.

CVS added: "We encourage providers to include their diagnosis on the prescriptions they write to help ensure patients have quick and easy access to medications."

Alisa Vidulich, policy director of the Arthritis Foundation, told AFP she was hopeful the situation might be remedied quickly as medical professionals and pharmacies developed new guidelines.

"But that may not actually be the case in all states and it may in fact turn into a longer term issue," she acknowledged.

Melissa, the nurse, said she was incensed at the double standard that allowed one of her best friends, who is a man, to get his methotrexate prescription filled right away with no questions asked.

"We're headed in the wrong direction and it's terrifying. I have two daughters. I don't want to see this," she said.

Q.Pilar--TPP