Louisiana sued over law classifying abortion pills as controlled substances

By Brendan Pierson

(Reuters) – A group of healthcare providers and others on Thursday sued Louisiana in an effort to block a law that classified mifepristone and misoprostol, the drugs used in medication abortion, as controlled substances in the state.

“Controlled substances” refer to drugs or other substances that are tightly controlled by the government because they may be abused or cause addiction.

The lawsuit was filed in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, state court by plaintiffs including the New Orleans-based Birthmark Doula Collective, a doctor, a pharmacist, and women who said they were denied medically necessary treatment as a result of the law and others.

The law at issue was signed by Governor Jeff Landry in May. It designates the two drugs, which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved more than two decades ago, as safe and effective for terminating pregnancies, as Schedule IV drugs, typically pain-killers and mood-altering medications that merit greater oversight due to their potential for abuse or dependence.

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