Oklahoma Code § 63-1-729a

Title 63. Public Health And Safety: Sale or distribution of RU-486
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A.  The Legislature finds that:
1.  The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the
drug mifepristone (brand name "Mifeprex"), a first-generation
[selective] progesterone receptor modulator ([S]PRM), as an
abortion-inducing drug with a specific gestation, dosage, and
administration protocol;
2.  The FDA approved mifepristone (brand name Mifeprex) under
the rubric of 21 C.F.R., Section 314.520, also referred to as
"Subpart H", which is the only FDA approval process that allows for
postmarketing restrictions.  Specifically, the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) provides for accelerated approval of certain drugs
that are shown to be effective but "can be safely used only if
distribution or use is restricted";
3.  The FDA does not treat Subpart H drugs in the same manner as
drugs which undergo the typical approval process;
4.  As approved by the FDA, and as outlined in the Mifeprex
final printed labeling (FPL), an abortion by mifepristone consists
of three two-hundred-milligram tablets of mifepristone taken orally,
followed by two two-hundred-microgram tablets of misoprostol taken
orally, through forty-nine (49) days LMP (a gestational measurement
using the first day of the woman's "last menstrual period" as a
marker).  The patient is to return for a follow-up visit in order to
confirm that the abortion has been completed.  This FDA-approved

protocol is referred to as the "Mifeprex regimen" or the "RU-486
regimen";
5.  The aforementioned procedure requires three office visits by
the patient, and the dosages may only be administered in a clinic,
medical office, or hospital and under supervision of a physician;
6.  The Mifeprex final printed labeling (FPL) outlines the FDA-
approved dosage and administration of both drugs in the Mifeprex
regimen, namely mifepristone and misoprostol;
7.  When the FDA approved the Mifeprex regimen under Subpart H,
it did so with certain restrictions.  For example, the distribution
and use of the Mifeprex regimen must be under the supervision of a
physician who has the ability to assess the duration of pregnancy,
diagnose ectopic pregnancies, and provide surgical intervention (or
has made plans to provide surgical intervention through other
qualified physicians);
8.  One of the restrictions imposed by the FDA as part of its
Subpart H approval is a written agreement that must be signed by
both the physician and patient.  In that agreement, the woman
attests to the following, among other statements:
a. "I believe I am no more than 49 days (7 weeks)
pregnant",
b. "I understand that I will take misoprostol in my
provider's office two days after I take Mifeprex (Day
3)", and
c. "I will do the following: return to my provider's
office in two days (Day 3) to check if my pregnancy
has ended.  My provider will give me misoprostol if I
am still pregnant";
9.  The FDA concluded that available medical data did not
support the safety of home use of misoprostol, and it specifically
rejected information in the Mifeprex final printed labeling (FPL) on
self-administering misoprostol at home;
10.  The use of abortion-inducing drugs presents significant
medical risks to women, including but not limited to abdominal pain,
cramping, vomiting, headache, fatigue, uterine hemorrhage, viral
infections, and pelvic inflammatory disease;
11.  Abortion-inducing drugs are associated with an increased
risk of complications relative to surgical abortion.  The risk of
complications increases with advancing gestational age, and, in the
instance of the Mifeprex regimen, with failure to complete the two-
step dosage process;
12.  In July 2011, the FDA reported 2,207 adverse events in the
United States after women used abortion-inducing drugs.  Among those
were 14 deaths, 612 hospitalizations, 339 blood transfusions, and
256 infections (including 48 "severe infections");
13.  "Off-label" or so-called "evidence-based" use of abortion-
inducing drugs may be deadly.  To date, fourteen women have

reportedly died after administering abortion-inducing drugs, with
eight deaths attributed to severe bacterial infection.  All eight of
those women administered the drugs in an "off-label" or "evidence-
based" manner advocated by many abortion providers.  The FDA has
received no reports of women dying from bacterial infection
following administration according to the FDA-approved protocol for
the Mifeprex regimen.  The FDA has not been able to conclude one way
or another whether off-label use led to the eight deaths;
14.  Medical evidence demonstrates that women who utilize
abortion-inducing drugs incur more complications than those who have
surgical abortions;
15.  Based on the foregoing findings, it is the purpose of this
act to:
a. protect women from the dangerous and potentially
deadly off-label use of abortion-inducing drugs, and
b. ensure that physicians abide by the protocol approved
by the FDA for the administration of abortion-inducing
drugs, as outlined in the drugs' final printed
labeling (FPL); and
16.  In response to the Oklahoma Supreme Court's decision in
Cline v. Oklahoma Coalition for Reproductive Justice (No. 111,939),
in which the Oklahoma Supreme Court determined, in contravention of
this Legislature's intent, that this act prohibits all uses of
misoprostol for chemical abortion and prohibits the use of
methotrexate in treating ectopic pregnancies, it is also the purpose
of this act to legislatively overrule the decision of the Oklahoma
Supreme Court and ensure that should such questions be presented
before that Court in the future it will reach the proper result that
this act does not ban use of misoprostol in chemical abortion (and
allows it as part of the FDA-approved Mifeprex regimen) nor prevent
the off-label use of drugs for the treatment of ectopic pregnancy.
B.  As used in this section:
1.  "Abortion-inducing drug" means a medicine, drug, or any
other substance prescribed or dispensed with the intent of inducing
an abortion.  This includes off-label use of drugs known to have
abortion-inducing properties, which are prescribed specifically with
the intent of causing an abortion, such as misoprostol (Cytotec),
and methotrexate.  This definition does not apply to drugs that may
be known to cause an abortion, but which are prescribed for other
medical indications, such as chemotherapeutic agents or diagnostic
drugs, or for treatment of an ectopic pregnancy;
2.  "Abortion" means the use or prescription of any instrument,
medicine, drug, or any other substance or device intentionally to
terminate the pregnancy of a female known to be pregnant with an
intention other than to increase the probability of a live birth, to
preserve the life or health of the child after live birth, to remove
an ectopic pregnancy, or to remove a dead unborn child who died as

the result of a spontaneous miscarriage, accidental trauma, or a
criminal assault on the pregnant female or her unborn child;
3.  "Drug label" or "drug's label" means the pamphlet
accompanying an abortion-inducing drug which outlines the protocol
authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and agreed
upon by the drug company applying for FDA authorization of that
drug.  Also known as "final printed labeling (FPL)" or referred to
as the "FDA-approved label", it is the FDA-approved document which
delineates how a drug is to be used according to the FDA approval;
4.  "Mifeprex regimen" means the abortion-inducing drug regimen
that is described in the FDA-approved Mifeprex final printed
labeling, and which involves administration of mifepristone (brand
name "Mifeprex") and misoprostol.  It is the only abortion-inducing
drug regimen approved by the FDA, and it does not include any dosage
or administration not explicitly approved in Mifeprex final printed
labeling.  It is also commonly referred to as the "RU-486 regimen"
or simply "RU-486";
5.  "Mifepristone" means the first drug used in the Mifeprex
regimen;
6.  "Misoprostol" means the second drug used in the Mifeprex
regimen;
7.  "Personal identifying information" means any information
designed to identify a person and any information commonly used or
capable of being used alone or in conjunction with any other
information to identify a person; and
8.  "Physician" means a doctor of medicine or osteopathy legally
authorized to practice medicine in the state.
C.  No person shall knowingly or recklessly give, sell,
dispense, administer, prescribe, or otherwise provide an abortion-
inducing drug, including the Mifeprex regimen, unless the person who
gives, sells, dispenses, administers, prescribes, or otherwise
provides the abortion-inducing drug is a physician who:
1.  Has the ability to assess the duration of the pregnancy
accurately;
2.  Has the ability to diagnose ectopic pregnancies;
3.  Has the ability to provide surgical intervention in cases of
incomplete abortion or severe bleeding, or has made and documented
in the patient's medical record plans to provide such care through
other qualified physicians; and
4.  Is able to assure patient access to medical facilities
equipped to provide blood transfusions and resuscitation, if
necessary.
D.  No physician who provides an abortion-inducing drug,
including the Mifeprex regimen, shall knowingly or recklessly fail
to provide or prescribe the drug according to the protocol
authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and as outlined
in the FDA-approved label.  In the specific case of the Mifeprex

regimen, the Mifeprex label includes the FDA-approved dosage and
administration instructions for both mifepristone (brand name
Mifeprex) and misoprostol, and any provision accomplished according
to that labeling is not prohibited.
E.  No physician who provides an abortion-inducing drug,
including the Mifeprex regimen, shall knowingly or recklessly fail
to:
1.  Provide each patient with a copy of the drug manufacturer's
medication guide and drug label for the drug(s) being used; when the
Mifeprex regimen is being utilized, this requirement is satisfied so
long as the patient is provided the FDA-approved Mifeprex medication
guide and final printed labeling;
2.  Fully explain the procedure to the patient, including, but
not limited to, explaining that the drug is being used in accordance
with the protocol authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration and as outlined in the drug label for the abortion-
inducing drug;
3.  Provide the female with a copy of the drug manufacturer's
patient agreement and obtain the patient's signature on the patient
agreement;
4.  Sign the patient agreement; and
5.  Record the drug manufacturer's package serial number in the
patient's medical record.
F.  Because the failure and complications rates from abortion-
inducing drugs increase with increasing gestational age, and because
the physical symptoms of an abortion induced by drugs can be
identical to the symptoms of ectopic pregnancy, thereby increasing
the risk of ruptured ectopic pregnancy, the physician giving,
selling, dispensing, administering, or otherwise providing or
prescribing the abortion-inducing drug shall first examine the woman
and document, in the woman's medical chart, gestational age and
intrauterine location of the pregnancy prior to giving, selling,
dispensing, administering, or otherwise providing or prescribing the
abortion-inducing drug.
G.  An abortion-inducing drug must be administered in the same
room and in the physical presence of the physician who prescribed,
dispensed, or otherwise provided the drug to the patient.  The
physician inducing the abortion, or a person acting on behalf of the
physician inducing the abortion, shall schedule the patient for a
follow-up appointment and make all reasonable efforts to ensure that
the patient returns twelve (12) to eighteen (18) days after the
administration or use of the abortion-inducing drug for a follow-up
visit so that the physician can confirm that the pregnancy has been
terminated and assess the patient's medical condition.  A brief
description of the efforts made to comply with this subsection,
including the date, time, and identification by name of the person

making such efforts, shall be included in the patient's medical
record.
H.  1.  If a physician provides an abortion-inducing drug and
knows that the female who uses the abortion-inducing drug
experiences within one (1) year after the use of the abortion-
inducing drug an incomplete abortion, severe bleeding, or an adverse
reaction to the abortion-inducing drug or is hospitalized, receives
a transfusion, or experiences any other serious event, the physician
shall, as soon as is practicable, but in no case more than sixty
(60) days after the physician learns of the adverse reaction or
serious event, provide a written report of the incomplete abortion,
severe bleeding, adverse reaction, hospitalization, transfusion, or
serious event to the drug manufacturer.  If the physician is a
doctor of medicine, the physician shall simultaneously provide a
copy of the report to the State Board of Medical Licensure and
Supervision.  If the physician is a doctor of osteopathy, the
physician shall simultaneously provide a copy of the report to the
State Board of Osteopathic Examiners.  The relevant Board shall
compile and retain all reports it receives pursuant to this
subsection.  All reports the relevant Board receives under this
subsection are public records open to inspection pursuant to the
Oklahoma Open Records Act; however, absent an order by a court of
competent jurisdiction, neither the drug manufacturer nor the
relevant Board shall release the name or any other personal
identifying information regarding a person who uses or provides the
abortion-inducing drug for the purpose of inducing an abortion and
who is the subject of a report the drug manufacturer or the relevant
Board receives under this subsection.
2.  No physician who provides an abortion-inducing drug to a
pregnant female shall knowingly or recklessly fail to file a report
required under paragraph 1 of this subsection.  Knowing or reckless
failure to comply with this subsection shall subject the physician
to sanctioning by the licensing board having administrative
authority over such physician.
I.  Any female upon whom an abortion has been performed, the
father of the unborn child who was the subject of the abortion if
the father was married to the woman who received the abortion at the
time the abortion was performed, or a maternal grandparent of the
unborn child may maintain an action against the person who performed
the abortion in knowing or reckless violation of this section for
actual and punitive damages.  Any female upon whom an abortion has
been attempted in knowing or reckless violation of this section may
maintain an action against the person who attempted to perform the
abortion for actual and punitive damages.
J.  If a judgment is rendered in favor of the plaintiff in any
action described in this section, the court shall also render
judgment for a reasonable attorney fee in favor of the plaintiff

against the defendant.  If a judgment is rendered in favor of the
defendant and the court finds that the plaintiff's suit was
frivolous and brought in bad faith, the court shall also render
judgment for a reasonable attorney fee in favor of the defendant
against the plaintiff.
K.  No pregnant female who obtains or possesses an abortion-
inducing drug to terminate her own pregnancy shall be subject to any
action brought under subsection I of this section.
L.  If some or all of the language in this section is ever
temporarily or permanently restrained or enjoined by judicial order,
then this section shall be enforced as though such restrained or
enjoined provisions had not been adopted; provided, however, that
whenever such temporary or permanent restraining order or injunction
is stayed or dissolved, or otherwise ceases to have effect, such
provisions shall have full force and effect.
Added by Laws 2010, c. 48, § 1, emerg. eff. April 2, 2010.  Amended
by Laws 2011, c. 216, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2011; Laws 2014, c. 121, §
1, eff. Nov. 1, 2014.
NOTE:  The conditional repeal of this section by Laws 2021, c. 308,
§ 2, was itself repealed by Laws 2022, c. 133, § 2, emerg. eff.
April 29, 2022.

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