Overview
- HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. directed the FDA to review mifepristone's safety following a report by the Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC) claiming a high rate of adverse events.
- The EPPC study, which is neither peer-reviewed nor published in a medical journal, alleges nearly 11% of users experience serious complications—a figure far exceeding established data.
- Critics, including medical experts, argue the study inflates risks by counting emergency room visits as adverse events, even when no treatment was required.
- Decades of peer-reviewed research affirm mifepristone's safety, with a 99% success rate, a 0.4% serious complication risk, and a 0.001% mortality rate based on over 100 studies.
- Reproductive-rights groups warn the FDA review could lead to new restrictions on mifepristone, which is used in two-thirds of U.S. abortions and has been taken by over 7.5 million people since its approval.