Legislation approved on Feb. 3, 2026, by the South Carolina House would classify mifepristone and misoprostol as controlled dangerous substances. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) Republican-majority legislatures have continued to focus on abortion medication by proposing legislation to further restrict mifepristone and misoprostol. GOP lawmakers are advancing bills that would allow people to sue out-of-state abortion providers and manufacturers. Measures popping up in Missouri, South Carolina and West Virginia echo a law Texas passed last year that lets residents sue anyone involved in sending abortion pills into their states. Meanwhile, Republicans and Democrats in other states — even those that restrict abortion — have joined forces to endorse legislation that could make it easier to access contraception. Lawmakers in Georgia and Tennessee are considering bills that would allow pharmacists to prescribe contraception and require insurers to co...
A pharmacist at Mayo Pharmacy in Bismarck, N.D., reviews completed pharmaceutical orders in January. Advocates, providers, medical associations and state lawmakers are pushing for insurers to cover non-opioid pain medications. (Photo by Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor) More states are requiring their Medicaid programs and health insurance companies to cover non-opioid pain medications as an alternative to opioids, which can be cheaper for insurers but also more addictive for patients. Advocates, providers, medical associations and state lawmakers are pushing for parity in coverage. That means prohibiting insurers from charging higher copayments for non-opioids than they do for opioids, and barring them from requiring prior authorization or step therapy — mandating that patients try other medications first — before they will cover non-opioid drugs. At least eight states have enacted such laws: Arkansas, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Oregon and Tennesse...