A women participates in a protest outside of outside of the Hyatt Regency where Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was scheduled to attend a fundraiser on March 22, 2012, in Washington, DC.

Now that Roe v. Wade has gone from canon to a likely fatality of the Trump administration, reproductive justice proponents are hustling to get better laws on the books at the state level—and to repeal the laws that Roe made moot, as they’d otherwise go back into effect if Roe falls. They’re also thinking ahead in another way: They’re anticipating the need to provide information about self-managed abortion.

A 2015 article from the Guttmacher Institute reported that between 2011 through August 2015 states enacted a total of 287 new restrictions on abortion care. These laws have been used to persecute women aggressively. Women of color and women living in poverty are most likely to be targeted under such laws. The violations—a.k.a. pretexts—range from failure to report an abortion to fetal homicide. Women who insist they miscarried have nonetheless been convicted and jailed. Mistrust of health care providers and law enforcement both will only get worse if we lose Roe, with good reason.

Women—especially young women—have already turned to the internet for self-abortion information. During a 32-day period between May and June 2017, people in the United States searched for information about self-abortion more than 200,000 times.

Those searches likely yielded the only current workaround for self-managing a medical abortion: ordering misoprostol online. Misoprostol is available OTC in many countries and is also prescribed here to treat a variety of conditions. Of course, it’s only one part of the two-drug regimen—mifepristone and misoprostol both—recommended by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. The combination is 98 percent effective, but mifepristone is highly regulated; misoprostol alone is 85 percent effective in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. It’s also safe. And far better than nothing.