Health hazards of oral contraceptives


  • Health risks associated with birth-control pills
  • Unsafe contraceptive pills
  • Dangers of hormonal contraception

Nature

Contraceptive pills ("the Pill") prevents pregnancy by altering the hormonal balance and it is this alteration that produces the many side effects. Some are minor and easily cured; others are serious and permanent. In pregnancy the vascular system of the body adjusts to accommodate a rapidly enlarging uterus. In the false pregnancy induced by the Pill the pelvic vascular system has an increased blood supply but there is no enlarging uterus to utilize this increase. In pregnancy the blood is altered and becomes more coagulable. This helps to promote easy clotting at the site of placental separation and so reduce the amount of bleeding following childbirth. The Pill duplicates the hyper-coagulable state, which makes the patient prone to intravascular thrombosis and stroke. The Pill raises the level of serum cholesterol and triglyceride, thus increasing the likelihood of coronary disease. The Pill has also been associated with migraine, severe emotional disturbance, reduced libido, cancers of the breast, cervix and liver; and minor side-effects such as thrush infections, nausea, breast tenderness, irregular bleeding, skin pigmentation, jaundice, weight gain, fluid retention, raised blood pressure, kidney disease, depression, urinary tract infection, inability to wear contact lenses, worsening of asthma, epilepsy, gall-bladder disease and raised blood sugar.

Background

In 1951, US birth control advocate Margaret Sanger asked researcher Gregory Pincus to develop an effective hormonal contraceptive, funded by heiress Katharine McCormick.  Pincus found that progesterone helped to stop ovulation, and used this to develop a trial pill. Clinical trials were conducted on vulnerable women, notably in Puerto Rico, where there were concerns about informed consent and side effects. in 1960, a birth-control pill, made by the G.D. Searle Company of Chicago was approved by the FDA. It took ten years to prove a link between oral contraceptive use and serious side effects. After a 1970 US government inquiry, the pill’s hormone levels were lowered dramatically. Another outcome was the patient information sheet, noting possible side-effects, now found inside all prescription drug packets.

The pill caused major global demographic changes with smaller families and increased incomes as women re-entered the workforce. However, it’s still raising questions about how the medical profession has experimented on women’s bodies.

 

Incidence

Research at the University of Southern California has shown that during the first six months of taking a birth control pill, the risk of developing cervical cancer trebles. After that period the risk reduces to double but rises again to treble if the contraceptive is taken for more than 12 years. The rate of cervical cancer in the US doubled between the early 1970s (when the Pill was beginning to be widely used) and the mid-1980s.

The risk of thrombosis is 5 in 100,000 for healthy women not on the Pill. This risk increases to 30 in 100,000 for those taking third generation versions of the Pill, which on the other hand reduce the risk of heart attack, according to research reported in 1995.

Claim

  1. Any preparation which interferes with the natural hormonal balance of women must have serious health implications.

Counter claim

  1. When birth control pills were introduced in the 1960s, doctors did not know the potential risks. We now know which medical conditions make using hormonal methods unwise. These conditions include high blood pressure, certain heart and liver disorders, stroke, migraine headaches and breast cancer, among others.

  2. The Pill is the most tested medicine of all time. The low-dose preparations used today are just as effective and much safer than the early pills, and any risk of abnormal blood clotting is virtually confined to women over 35 who smoke. Research has shown that the protection given by the Pill against cancers of the ovary and uterus outweighs any slight increase in the risk of breast cancer in young women. Overall, the Pill reduces a woman's risk of developing cancer. More women die each year from allergic reaction to penicillin that from disorders brought on by the Pill. Using it is far less dangerous than becoming pregnant.


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