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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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052091
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0520351.000
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1992-08-28
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MEDICINE, Page 50Bucking the Pro-Lifers
A movement grows to bring RU-486 to the U.S.
Roussel Uclaf, French manufacturer of the abortion pill called
RU-486, has balked at bringing its controversial product to the
U.S., out of fear that it will become the target of protests by
the pro-life movement. Now, however, there is growing grass-roots
pressure to provide Americans access to the pill, which induces
an abortion when taken during the first trimester.
The latest initiative comes from New Hampshire's usually
conservative legislature, where the house has passed a bill that
would invite Roussel to conduct a trial of the drug in New
Hampshire as part of the process of getting it approved by the
Food and Drug Administration. Says one supporter, state
representative Carmela DiPietro: "I'm a Republican, a Catholic
and a mother of six. But what I support above all else is an
individual's right to personal choice." Other states looking at
similar bills include Minnesota and California. New York City
Mayor David Dinkins has sent letters to 33 mayors, urging them
to increase pressure on the Bush Administration to foster
testing of the pill. And in Washington, Congressman Ron Wyden
of Oregon has introduced legislation that would lift FDA
restrictions on the import of the drug for personal use.
Kate Michelman, executive director of the National
Abortion Rights Action League, calls RU-486, which has been used
in France since 1988, "probably the most important advance in
reproductive medicine since the birth-control pill." It may also
some day help treat such diseases as breast cancer and
osteoporosis. But opposition will remain strong. Last month the
Vatican released a report to U.S. bishops from a Spanish
bioethicist calling the drug a "new serious threat to human
life."