She had a miscarriage, and says a California CVS wouldn’t give her a prescribed abortion pill (2024)

Thibault did not answer questions about when the last time employees at Costales’ local pharmacy had been trained on reproductive health rights or what specific company policies are in place to ensure patients get medications in a timely manner.

A rare pregnancy complication

Based on Costales’ ultrasound and other tests, she said doctors suspected she might have a molar pregnancy, a rare complication that can form cancer if untreated.They recommended surgery to find out, she said.

Surgery is the only way to remove the tissue and confirm a molar pregnancy diagnosis, said Dr. Aparna Sridhar, an obstetrician and associate clinical professor at UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine. Sridhar was not involved in Costales’ care.

After the procedure, Costales said she felt fine until a week later when she woke up bleeding heavily and in severe pain. At the emergency room, the doctor recommended misoprostol to help her body finish expelling any remaining pregnancy tissue or uterine lining.

“I wanted to get my medication as soon as I could. And I wanted to get home and administer it so that we could feel at ease and at peace with, you know, the rest of our care plan,” Costales said.

For most miscarriages and early pregnancy loss, Sridhar said the three management options are surgical intervention, medication and waiting to see if the body successfully empties the uterus by itself. Determining the course of treatment should be a joint decision between the patient and doctor, and all three options have been shown to be safe, Sridhar said.

But at the CVS pharmacy at 4829 Clairemont Drive, the first employee told Costales there was no prescription for her on file, the National Women’s Law Center letter alleges. The second employee told her “I don’t know if we can fill this,” according to the letter. And after asking to speak with the pharmacist for an explanation, Costales alleges in the letter that the pharmacist said “It doesn’t matter if I have it, I am not comfortable dispensing it to you” and walked away.

The experience was humiliating, Costales said, adding that the shame and anger have lasted for months.

“The hardest part is I feel like CVS robbed me of my ability to mourn my pregnancy loss,” Costales said.

Abortion challenges continue

She had a miscarriage, and says a California CVS wouldn’t give her a prescribed abortion pill (2)

The CVS employees did not tell Costales why they objected to providing her with the medication prescribed to her, she said. Nonetheless, California health experts say there is confusion among providers about what the law requires since the U.S. Supreme Court two years ago overturned Roe v. Wade and ended the constitutional right to abortion.

Last week, the Supreme Court rejected the latest bid by anti-abortion groups to overturn federal Food and Drug Administration regulations that expanded access to another medication, mifepristone, used both for abortion and miscarriage management. The plaintiffs were doctors opposed to abortion who argued that they could be required to treat someone in the emergency room with a complication related to abortion.

In the ruling, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote that federal law guarantees “broad and comprehensive conscience protections” for doctors who object to abortion and that the plaintiffs had no examples of being forced to treat a patient who had an abortion. The anti-abortion legal group leading the case against the FDA has already pledged to continue its legal battle

Experts say religious and moral objections have been protected for decades.

“That’s the status quo. We have decided that we are going to allow people to opt out of care that they don’t want to perform,” said Cathren Cohen, a staff attorney with the UCLA Center on Reproductive Health, Law and Policy.

Despite laws that also protect a patient’s right to get medical care, individuals can struggle to defend or advocate for themselves.

“This flip-flopping of changing of laws from day-to-day does have a detrimental and chilling effect on care people are getting,” Cohen said.

Even in California the constantly changing landscape causes uncertainty, said Dr. Josie Urbina, an obstetrician at the Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. Doctors like herself have difficulty keeping up with the ripple effects of national decision-making, and patients find it especially hard to know what is available to them and what they have a right to, she said.

“It still causes confusion, it still causes people to think ‘This may affect me,’” Urbina said.

Spera, Costales’ lawyer, said that confusion and the loss of federal abortion protections emboldens people who are not involved in an individual’s health care to say “I know what’s best.” Costales said she wants Californians who identify with her story to know that they have legal protections.

“One of the reasons why I live in California is to make sure I will be protected, and I don’t have to worry about planning for my family,” Costales said. “How many other people are being impacted by this and are getting their rights neglected or just stomped on?”

Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit www.chcf.org to learn more.

She had a miscarriage, and says a California CVS wouldn’t give her a prescribed abortion pill (2024)

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