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How will Indiana’s abortion law affect medications that treat other conditions like lupus?

One member of Indiana Two-Way from South Bend was curious about how Indiana's near-total abortion ban might affect their access to lupus medication – which can also be used to medically induce abortions.
One member of Indiana Two-Way from South Bend was curious about how Indiana's near-total abortion ban might affect their access to lupus medication – which can also be used to medically induce abortions.

Indiana’s abortion law bans the procedure in almost all cases, with limited exceptions for rape, incest and the health of the pregnant person.

One member of Indiana Two-Way from South Bend was curious about how this might affect their access to lupus medication – which can also be used to medically induce abortions.

Jody Madeira is a law professor at Indiana University Bloomington. She said this new law may affect access to these medications.

“Pharmacists have to honor all prescriptions, but they are immune from criminal prosecution or civil liability if they refuse to honor prescriptions because in their professional judgment, it would be contrary to the law or a patient's health and safety are against the patient's best interests,” she said.

She said in some states, women have been  refused medication treating conditions like arthritis.

Madeira said there have been several scenarios in Texas that show blocked access to this drug.

“An 8-year-old girl was  initially refused a prescription for methotrexate, another abortion medication by a pharmacist that said that females of childbearing potential have to have a diagnosis on hardcopy,” Maderia said.

In Indiana, pharmacists are typically expected to prescribe as the doctor ordered. But  a 2019 law expanded protections for medical professionals who object to abortion on “ethical, moral, or religious grounds” to refuse to participate in abortions, to include pharmacists who refuse to dispense abortion-inducing drugs.

“There's nowhere in the abortion bill where it addresses pharmacists, refusals. Nor does it necessarily give pharmacists leave explicitly in the bill to sign off on prescriptions for abortion medication,” she said.

READ MORE: Governor Holcomb largely dismisses potential economic impact of abortion ban

Join the conversation and sign up for the Indiana Two-Way. Text "Indiana" to 73224. Your comments and questions in response to our weekly text help us find the answers you need on statewide issues.

Madeira said pharmacists should recognize that lupus medication, in particular, requires a lower dose to treat this condition compared to the higher doses required to induce an abortion.

She also emphasized patients with lupus and other conditions may experience severe pain without receiving their prescriptions, and this may lead pharmacists to continue to prescribe these medications.

However, Madeira said uncertainty may lead pharmacists to create more hurdles for patients to receive treatment.

“This might be actually right, that until these regulations are worked out, and until physicians know which medications are going to be scrutinized more closely, that they're going to assume that all medications used for abortion as well as other conditions might be scrutinized more closely,” she said.

She added that with immunity from civil prosecution or civil liability, pharmacists are free to make their own judgments.

Indiana’s near-total abortion ban goes into effect on Sept. 15.

This story came from a question through the Indiana Two-Way. Do you have a question about the new abortion law? Join our weekly text group by texting "Indiana" to 73224.

Contact reporter Violet at  vcomberwilen@wfyi.org or follow her on Twitter at  @ComberWilen.

Violet Comber-Wilen covers stories that affect Hoosiers in all parts of Indiana. She is a recent graduate of the University of Florida’s College of Journalism and Communications (Go Gators!) Before coming to IPB News, she worked at the North Central Florida NPR affiliate, WUFT News and interned for the Tampa Bay NPR affiliate, WUSF Public Media. Comber-Wilen grew up in Pennsylvania and spent most of her adolescent life in South Florida. Outside of work, she Is an avid runner and loves to travel.