The abortion drug known as RU-486 has received the green light from Health Canada.

The regulator said late Wednesday it has approved the use of Mifegymiso to terminate pregnancies up to a gestational age of 49 days.

​Canadian women will need to obtain a prescription from a doctor to purchase the combination drug.

"Health Canada confirms that this decision has been taken and that the company has been informed yesterday," a spokesman said in an email. The product will be distributed by Celopharma Inc. and is expected to be available for sale in winter 2016, said a statement from the drug's manufacturer, London, U.K.-based Linepharma International Limited. "The decision does not rest with me," Health Minister Rona Ambrose said Thursday from St. Albert, north of Edmonton. "It's out my hands and the decision is final." The drug has been available since 1988 in France. The drug was approved for use in the United States in 2000 and is also available in more than 57 countries, Linepharma said. While it is often called mifepristone, mifegymiso contains two drugs, mifepristone and misoprostol. The former blocks production of the hormone progesterone, needed to sustain a pregnancy. The latter prompts the uterus to contract and expel the placenta and the fetus. After a review lasting longer than two years, Health Canada has approved the abortion-inducing drug RU-486, bottles of which are shown in this his September 2010 photo. (Charlie Neibergall/Associated Press) Canadian women will take one pill at a doctor's office, go home and take four pills within 12 to 24 hours and then return to the doctor one to two weeks later for a followup visit, a spokeswoman for Linepharma said. Vicki Saporta, president and CEO of the National Abortion Federation and its Canadian offshoot, NAF Canada, said the application has been before Health Canada since December 2012. Gold standard approach "No one can claim that they fast-tracked the approval process and didn't very thoroughly and completely review the application," Saporta said.

NAF Canada represents health-care professionals who provide most of the abortion care in this country and worked to introduce the drug in Canada.

Dr. Erika Feuerstein, a family physician at Women's College Hospital and Bay Centre for Birth Control in Toronto, said it's more effective and efficient than the current medical option available in Canada — a combination of anticancer injectable drug methotrexate followed by misoprostol.

"It works a bit faster, it has a higher success rate," Feuerstein said.

Some women want to have a surgical abortion and other women prefer a medical abortion, Feuerstein said. "It's nice that they can have the option to choose which method serves them the best."

Surgical abortion will continue to be important in situations when the medical abortion fails, Feuerstein added.

Studies suggest the drug can be used safely as late as 70 days into a pregnancy.

Dr. André Ulmann, l﻿ead scientist on RU-486 at Linepharma, said ​the company always starts with 49 days when seeking market authorization to be cautious.

Health Canada did not answer questions from CBC News on details of the approval.

Dr. Jennifer Blake, CEO of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in Ottawa, said both OBGYNs and family physicians who complete training on the safe use of this medication will be able to prescribe it.

Asked about the timing of the decision, Blake said the society was notified in the winter about the status of the decision and it was released on schedule.

Rebecca Cook, a law professor in the International Reproductive and Sexual Health Law Program at the University of Toronto, wrote a 2013 commentary in the Canadian Medical Association Journal that was titled "Medical abortion in Canada: behind the times."

"The approval of the mifepristone/misoprostol product by Health Canada is an important achievement for Canada. Science has prevailed over ideology to ensure that women have access to the benefits of scientific progress," Cook said in a statement to CBC News.

Mifepristone with misoprostol is considered the "gold standard" for medical abortions, Cook and her co-author Dr. Sheila Dunn of Women's College Hospital in Toronto said in their commentary. It's included in the World Health Organizations list of "essential medicines" — the minimum medicines needed for basic health-care systems, based on criteria such as safety and cost effectiveness.

University of Toronto ethicist Kerry Bowman expects that will increase access to abortion for women who live in rural and remote places.

"The hope is that with time it will enter into further out there areas. Maybe even midwives, even nurse clinicians. I don't know. I'm not saying that now, but over time."