It's precisely for this reason -- fear of being found out, and the strong possibility that a young girl will not seek help for complications -- that a drug with potentially fatal known side effects shouldn't be given.
Remember the '60's and '70's -- when all the pro-abortion propaganda focused on young women being aborted (and dying) from hatchet jobs by illegal practitioners? Some of them bled to death because they didn't want anyone -- usually their parents -- to know they were pregnant.
Of course, abortion is such a major industry nowadays, the practitioners could care less about the mental state of a teenager, and the fact that there is no adult present to supervise the patient.
I hope this death haunts the doctor who prescribed the drug, but I'm not holding my breath.
No reason to take RU-46 off the market while Tylenol is still available. Tylenol doesn't even require a prescription, and any kid can take buy and take as much as they want -- and not everybody who needs a liver transplant gets one in time, even if they go straight to the doctor at the first sign of serious liver damage. There's probably not a single drug on the market that hasn't killed at least one person, in most cases due to the patient ignoring symptoms of serious complications from either the drug or the underlying condition, or not bothering to read and follow dosage and "do not mix with" instructions.