Last November, Xaiana, a 23-year-old college student in northern Brazil, began exchanging text messages with a drug dealer in the south of the country. Following the dealer's instructions, she transferred 1,500 reais (10,000 baht), her living expenses for several months. Then, she waited three agonising weeks for the arrival in the mail of a blister pack of eight unmarked white pills.
With Roe v. Wade overturned, states banning abortion are looking to prevent the distribution of abortion medication. Brazil shows the possible consequences.