| |
America's
favorite
birth
control
method
turns 50
By CARLA
K.
JOHNSON
AP
Medical
Writer
A world
without
"the
pill" is
unimaginable
to many
young
women
who now
use it
to treat
acne,
skip
periods,
improve
mood
and, of
course,
prevent
pregnancy.
They
might be
surprised
to learn
that
U.S.
officials
announcing
approval
of the
world's
first
oral
contraceptive
were
uncomfortable.
"Our own
ideas of
morality
had
nothing
to do
with the
case,"
said
John
Harvey
of the
Food and
Drug
Administration
in 1960.
The pill
was
safe, in
other
words.
Don't
blame us
if you
think
it's
wicked.
Sunday,
Mother's
Day, is
the 50th
anniversary
of that
provocative
announcement
that
introduced
to the
world
what is
now
widely
acknowledged
as one
of the
most
important
inventions
of the
last
century.
The
world
has
changed,
but it's
debatable
what
part the
birth
control
pill
played.
Some
experts
think it
gets too
much
credit
or blame
for the
sexual
revolution.
After
all, sex
outside
of
marriage
wasn't
new in
1960.
The pill
definitely
changed
sex
though,
giving
women
more
control
over
their
fertility
than
they'd
ever had
before
and
permanently
putting
doctors
— who
previously
didn't
see
contraceptives
as part
of their
job — in
the
birth
control
picture.
But some
things
haven't
changed.
Now as
then, a
male
birth
control
pill is
still on
the
drawing
board.
"There's
a joke
in this
field
that a
male
pill is
always
five to
seven
years
away
from the
market,
and
that's
what
people
have
been
saying
since
1960,"
said
Andrea
Tone, a
history
professor
at
Montreal's
McGill
University
and
author
of
"Devices
and
Desires:
A
History
of
Contraception
in
America."
The pill
is
America's
favorite
form of
reversible
birth
control.
(Sterilization
is the
leader
overall.)
Nearly a
third of
women
who want
to
prevent
unwanted
pregnancies
use it.
"In
2008,
Americans
spent
more
than
$3.5
billion
on birth
control
pills,"
Tone
said,
"and
we've
gone
from the
one pill
to 40
different
brands."

In this
photo
taken
Wednesday,
May 5,
2010,
Dr.
Melissa
Gilliam,
44, an
obstetrician
gynecologist,
associate
professor
and
chief of
family
planning
contraceptive
research
at
University
of
Chicago
Medical
Center
is seen
at the
hospital
in
Chicago.
Gilliam
says
that the
health
benefits
of
today's
contraceptive
pill are
tremendous.
She says
it
decreases
the risk
of
ovarian
cancer
and
uterine
cancer.
If we
called
it 'the
cancer-preventing
pill' it
would
have far
better
traction.
It's a
real
success
story.
America's
favorite
birth
control
method
turns 50
on
Sunday,
May 9,
2010.
(AP
Photo/Paul
Beaty)
There
are Yaz,
Yasmin,
Seasonale,
Seasonique
and
Lybrel —
all with
slightly
different
packaging,
formulations
and
selling
points.
Lybrel
is the
first
pill
designed
to
eliminate
menstrual
periods
entirely,
although
gynecologists
say any
generic
can do
the same
thing if
you skip
the
placebo
and take
the
active
pill
every
day.
In the
1960s,
anthropologist
Ashley
Montagu
thought
the
birth
control
pill was
as
important
as the
discovery
of fire.
Turns
out it
wasn't
the
answer
to
overpopulation,
war and
poverty,
as some
of its
early
advocates
had
hoped.
Nor did
it
universally
save
marriages.
"Married
couples
could
have
happier
sex with
more
freedom
and less
fear.
The
divorce
rate
might go
down and
there
would be
no more
unwanted
pregnancies,"
said
Elaine
Tyler
May, 62,
a
University
of
Minnesota
history
professor
who
wrote
"America
and the
Pill.
"None of
those
things
happened,
not the
optimistic
hopes or
the
pessimistic
fears of
sexual
anarchy,"
she
said.
And it
didn't
eliminate
all
unwanted
pregnancies
either.
Nearly
half of
all
pregnancies
to U.S.
women
are
unintended
and
nearly
half of
those
end in
abortion,
according
to the
Guttmacher
Institute,
which
has
gathered
data on
abortions
for
years.
The pill
is often
associated
with the
women's
movement
of the
1970s.
But the
two
feminists
behind
the
pill,
the ones
who
provided
the
intellectual
spark
and the
financial
backing,
were
born a
century
earlier,
in the
1870s.
As
suffragists
worked
for the
vote,
renowned
birth
control
pioneer
Margaret
Sanger
distributed
pamphlets
with
contraceptive
advice
and
dreamed
of a
magic
pill to
prevent
pregnancy.
Her
grandson,
Alex
Sanger,
62, now
chair of
the
International
Planned
Parenthood
Council,
remembers
playing
catch as
a boy
with his
famous
grandmother
and
eating
her
firehouse-spicy
food.
"My
grandmother
had the
idea for
the pill
back in
1912
when she
was
working
on the
lower
East
Side of
New
York,"
Alex
Sanger
said.
"She saw
women
resorting
to back
alley,
illegal
abortions.
One too
many of
these
women
died in
her arms
and she
said
'Enough.'
Katharine
McCormick,
a
philanthropist
with a
science
degree
from the
Massachusetts
Institute
of
Technology,
bankrolled
the work
of
Gregory
Pincus,
the man
Sanger
convinced
to
develop
the
pill.
"It was
my
grandmother's
idea and
Katharine
McCormick's
money,"
Alex
Sanger
said.
Ironically,
when
health
hazards
of the
early
pill
arose —
high
levels
of
hormones
caused
blood
clots in
some
women —
young
feminists
protested
that men
had
invented
it and
turned
women
into
unwitting
guinea
pigs.
The
FDA's
response
to the
hazards
of the
pill led
to
greater
access
to
safety
information
for
patients,
another
less-appreciated
part of
the
pill's
legacy.
Today's
pill,
with
much
lower
doses of
hormones,
is much
safer
than the
pill of
50 years
ago. And
it may
even be
good for
you.
"The
health
benefits
are
tremendous,"
said Dr.
Melissa
Gilliam,
chief of
family
planning
contraceptive
research
at the
University
of
Chicago
Medical
Center.
"It
decreases
the risk
of
ovarian
cancer
and
uterine
cancer.
If we
called
it 'the
cancer-preventing
pill,'
it would
have far
better
traction.
It's a
real
success
story."
The pill
divided
mothers
and
daughters
in its
early
days.
Married
women
had
clamored
for it
as soon
as it
went on
the
market —
within
two
years of
its
approval,
more
than a
million
women
were
taking
it. But
that
didn't
mean
they
wanted
their
unmarried
daughters
to have
it.
"I talk
to my
daughter
about
the pill
a lot
more
than I
talked
to my
mother
about
the
pill,"
said
Jean
Elson,
61, a
sociologist
and
expert
on
women's
health
at the
University
of New
Hampshire.
Elson
secretly
started
taking
the pill
in
college
in the
late
1960s
before
she was
married.
Her
mother
wouldn't
have
approved.
"The
only
conversations
about
sex I
remember
with my
mother
were
'not
to.' I
remember
warnings
about
tongue
kissing.
She
didn't
do that
until
she was
engaged,"
Elson
said.
Many
parents
now
discuss
birth
control
with
their
unmarried
daughters
and
sons.
They
also may
discuss
condoms
to
prevent
disease,
including
AIDS.
The
greatest
fear
associated
with
unprotected
sex for
young
people
is no
longer
pregnancy,
it's
serious
sexually
transmitted
disease.
Another
change
is
advertising.
Women
now in
their
20s have
seen ads
for the
pill
nearly
their
entire
lives.
The
first
magazine
ads for
the pill
ran in
1992.
Now TV
ads show
smiling
women
liberated
by the
ability
to limit
or even
eliminate
their
menstrual
periods.
"The
message
is your
period
shouldn't
get in
the way.
It's an
appealing
message,"
said
Sarah
Forbes,
28,
curator
of the
Museum
of Sex
in New
York.
Her
generation
takes
the pill
for many
reasons
and they
take it
for
granted.
"We're
so used
to it
being so
freely
available,"
Forbes
said.
"It's
almost
impossible
to think
of a
world
where we
didn't
have
access
to it."
The pill
is so
ubiquitous
that
young
women
may have
trouble
learning
about
other
options.
Tone
said one
doctor
said he
didn't
remember
how to
fit a
diaphragm,
a
flexible
shield
that
covers
the
cervix.
The pill
is so
highly
marketed
that
other
methods,
like
implants
and
IUDs,
aren't
clearly
understood
by young
women.
"We've
got
choices,
but the
information
about
them
isn't
always
well
balanced,"
said
Judy
Norsigian,
62,
executive
director
of Our
Bodies
Ourselves,
the
nonprofit
organization
that
publishes
the
long-standing
women's
health
guide of
the same
name.
Female
doctors
use IUDs
twice as
frequently
as the
general
population
of women
and many
recommend
it to
their
patients.
"The
future
of birth
control
is not
pills at
all,"
said Dr.
Lisa
Perriera,
34, of
Case
Western
Reserve
School
of
Medicine
in
Cleveland.
"The
best
birth
control
is easy
to use,
highly
effective
at
preventing
pregnancy
and has
few side
effects,"
Perriera
said.
"The
methods
that fit
those
criteria
best are
IUDs and
implants.
I think
that's
where
birth
control
is
going."
Others
hold out
hope for
a
breakthrough
in
male-centered
birth
control.
An oral
drug
called
miglustat
worked
in mice,
but not
in men.
Researchers
are
recruiting
men for
studies
of a
hormonal
gel to
suppress
sperm
production.
"The
question
is will
a single
company
decide
to take
this to
market,
to get
FDA
clearance,
a very
expensive
undertaking,
when
it's
hard to
predict
how
commercially
viable a
male
pill
would
be,"
Tone
said. As
much as
women
would
like men
to be
equal
partners
in
preventing
pregnancy,
"women
at the
same
time
feel a
little
bit
nervous
entrusting
men to
take a
pill or
be on a
patch."
After
all
these
years, a
male
equivalent
to the
birth
control
pill is
still
five to
seven
years
away. |