Friday, July 04, 2014

Just what the GOP wants - back to the old days. Keep your coat hangers at the ready!

The Rise of the DIY Abortion in Texas (Click here to read more)

A pill that revolutionized reproductive rights in Latin America is now gaining ground on the black market in South Texas.

Erica Hellerstein Jun 27 2014, 9:00 AM ET
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The Alamo flea market sits right off South Texas's lengthy Highway 83; a sprawling, dusty, labyrinth of a place. Under canopies in the converted parking lot, vendors in dark sunglasses stand behind tables heaped with piles of clothing, barking in Spanish and hawking their wares. The air is hot and muggy, thick with the scent of grilled corn and chili.
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Customers browse simple items-miracle-diet teas, Barbie dolls or turquoise jeans stretched over curvy mannequins-but there are also shoppers scanning the market for goods that aren't displayed in the stalls. Tables lined with bottles of medicine like Tylenol and NyQuil have double-meanings to those in the know: The over-the-counter drugs on top provide cover for the prescription drugs smuggled over the border from nearby cities in Mexico. Those, the dealer keeps out of sight.
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I'm here to look for a small, white, hexagonal pill called misoprostol. Also known as miso or Cytotec, the drug induces an abortion that appears like a miscarriage during the early stages of a woman's pregnancy. For women living in Latin America and other countries that have traditionally outlawed abortion, miso has been a lifeline-it's been called "a noble medication," "world-shaking" and "revolutionary." But now, it's not just an asset of the developing world.
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Brazilian pharmacies distributed misoprostol over the counter as an ulcer medication. Its use as an abortion-inducing drug slipped below the radar-but spread rapidly.
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As policies restricting access to abortion roll out in Texas and elsewhere, the use of miso is quickly becoming a part of this country's story. It has already made its way into the black market here in Texas's Rio Grande Valley, where abortion restrictions are tightening, and it is likely to continue its trajectory if anti-abortion legislation does not ease up and clinics continue to be closed.
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