June 25, 2024

Women Deserve to Know They Can Reverse In-Progress Chemical Abortions

Abortion pill reversal is a potent reminder to those who profit from abortion that, if given the option, many pregnant mothers want assistance that will help them choose life.

Alexandra DeSanctis, Public Discourse

Though abortion supporters would have you believe otherwise, many women regret choosing abortion and experience negative mental-health consequences long afterward. In recent years, doctors have developed a safe and effective method to allow women undergoing a chemical abortion to halt and reverse the procedure if they change their mind before the abortion is complete—and abortion providers are doing everything they can to stop women from finding out about it.


Abortion pill reversal, or APR, is a regimen of progesterone, an essential hormone in gestating an unborn child, that counteracts the harmful effects of the abortion drug mifepristone. In the best-case scenario, if taken at the right time, progesterone can stop mifepristone from cutting off nutrients to the unborn child, allowing the mother to carry a healthy baby to term.

On receiving the Pro Deo et Patria Award from Christendom College, George Weigel spoke on “The Achievement of John Paul II.”

Mary FioRito joined EWTN Pro-Life Weekly to explore potential legal challenges to abortion pills.

Alexandra DeSanctis joined EWTN Pro-Life Weekly to explain how pro-abortionists twist healthcare regulations to incorporate abortion.

Mary FioRito join the National Review Institute to reflect on current challenges to the defense of life and new signs of hope on the second anniversary of the end of Roe v. Wade.

EPPC Board Member Dr. Robert P. George led a discussion including Ryan T. Anderson about how to restore unity and heal division by bringing out what is best and most noble in our country through a return to fidelity to God, our spouses and families, our communities, and country.

Richard John Neuhaus Fellowship

Applications are now open for the 2024–2025 Richard John Neuhaus Fellowship, a graduate-level program in Washington, D.C., for those working in government, journalism, think tanks, or other policy-relevant institutions, which explores the Judeo-Christian tradition and its role in shaping public policy and the mediating institutions of civil society.