The APR protocol, which involves administering progesterone to counteract the effects of mifepristone (commonly known as RU-486), offers hope to women seeking to preserve their pregnancies. In the past few years, APR has become a lifeline for women who have a change of heart after taking mifepristone, an abortion pill that blocks progesterone, a hormone critical for sustaining pregnancy.
Timing is critical in the process, as intervention is most effective when initiated within 24 hours of taking mifepristone. Women who seek to reverse their chemical abortion and save their pregnancies reach out to the APRN, a coalition of over 1,400 healthcare professionals, clinics, hospitals and pharmacies worldwide administering the APR protocol. APRN, managed by Heartbeat International, supports more than 150 women each month who have taken the chemical abortion pill and have regretted it.
"We celebrate 6,000 children all made perfectly in the image of our God," said Christa Brown BSN, RN, the senior director of medical impact at Heartbeat International. "We are thankful for each of them and their brave mothers who at one point felt there was no other way and sadly started an abortion. Quickly, with deep regret, they realized the value of the life they carried and wanted a new plan and the APR Network was there to help." (Related: STUDY: 11.2% of late-term abortions in Quebec from 1989 to 2021 resulted in live births.)
"Six thousand children could fill 200 kindergarten classes," Brown continued. "Each of these children was counted by this world as nothing more than an abortion statistic, yet they are alive and thriving, adored by their families."
Overall, Brown disclosed that the APRN has helped women who attempt to continue their pregnancies in all 50 states in the U.S. and 93 other countries.
Despite the victory of APRN, abortion advocates are still criticizing APR as "junk science."
Social media giants have also played a role in stifling APR promotion. For instance, Facebook removed the APR page due to alleged "community standards violations" without warning. Facebook also took down a post by Heartbeat International sharing an APR mom's story using an unaccountable third-party fact checker. Similarly, Google removed APR hotline advertisements following a report by a pro-abortion group that was later challenged for inaccuracies.
Even political figures and government entities have taken direct action against APR. U.S. House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) criticized Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a letter for allowing APR ads and dismissed statistical evidence of successful reversals.
In 2023, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed a law that made it "unprofessional conduct" for medical providers to offer APR, a decision currently under legal challenge. Similarly, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health sent a memo to warn licensed healthcare professionals that APR is an unacceptable practice.
Meanwhile, California Attorney General Rob Bonta has filed lawsuits to block the organization Heartbeat International and a group of affiliated pregnancy medical clinics from advertising APR as safe and effective. New York Attorney General Letitia James has also made the same effort to suppress APR promotion.
All these claims, which often came from sources tied to the abortion industry or pharmaceutical companies, lack substantial evidence. They all use the same pro-abortion information and sources used by media outlets and dismiss thousands of successful reversals.
Visit Abortions.news for more stories related to the killing of the unborn.
Watch this Fox News report of the Supreme Court issuing a ruling that allows hospitals to perform emergency abortions.
This video is from the TrendingNews channel on Brighteon.com.
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