Planned Parenthood affiliates in Washington and Hawaii have launched a first-of-its-kind service that allows patients to obtain abortion medication before they are pregnant, making it available to have on hand if needed in the future.
The programme, called Just In Case, marks the first time a Planned Parenthood organisation has offered abortion medication in advance of pregnancy. It is available to patients aged 18 and older through telehealth appointments or at any of the organisation’s 16 health centres across Washington and Hawaii. Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood of the Great Northwest and the Hawaiian Islands, described the offering in straightforward terms. “It is a safe, simple, and effective abortion option that patients can get before they’re pregnant to have on hand,” Gibron said.
The service utilises Mifepristone and Misoprostol, the same medications that have been used in standard medication abortions for decades. The prescription is intended for use up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy, and the process takes approximately two days to complete. Patients requesting the medication undergo eligibility screening and counselling before receiving a prescription. The medication is packaged with instructions, and clinicians remain available by phone daily to answer questions before and after use.

Dr Colleen McNicholas, Chief of Clinical Transformation and Medical Affairs, said the service is designed to remove barriers that have made access difficult for many patients, particularly as the national reproductive healthcare landscape has shifted. She emphasised that the patient population seeking abortions is broad and spans all demographics. “The truth is, the typical abortion patient looks like your mom, and your sister, and your cousin, and your best friend,” McNicholas said. She estimates that one in four women in the United States will have an abortion during their lifetime. “Access isn’t easy for everybody, so this is a real opportunity for folks to have it at hand in their medicine cabinet, ready to go when and if they need,” she added.
Planned Parenthood selected Washington and Hawaii for the initial rollout because of the strong existing legal protections for abortion access in both states. Gibron was explicit that the programme would not be extended to states where abortion is restricted or banned. “We would not be providing abortion care in states where abortion is illegal,” she said, describing the current national situation as “a healthcare crisis in this country around sexual and reproductive health care.” Since the overturning of Roe v. Wade, 21 states have banned or significantly limited abortion access, creating a fragmented landscape in which access increasingly depends on geography.
Officials took care to distinguish the advance medication from emergency contraception. While emergency contraception is designed to prevent pregnancy shortly after intercourse, the Just In Case pills are prescribed to terminate an active pregnancy after conception has occurred. The medication is intended to be used at home, and Dr McNicholas described the process as mimicking a miscarriage, something she said is familiar to many people who have experienced pregnancy.
The service can be requested as a standalone appointment or alongside routine care including wellness exams, cancer screenings, and STI testing. Planned Parenthood said patients have already begun scheduling appointments since the launch.



