Archive for May, 2008

Considering Contraceptives and Birth Control

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Currently, there are over 303,000,000 US citizens and that population does not include all the illegal immigrants or undocumented workers. In October of 2007 the United States had passed the 300 million mark and already there are 3 million more. This is somewhat alarming as some have asked how many more people can this nation handle under the current conditions and mind you, this is not only happening in the US, it is happening all over the world. In China there are over 1.3 Billion people and in India over 1 Billion.

It is time that the human race control this incredible population growth and to do that it will be necessary to practice more birth control and enlighten large population bases on contraceptives. Without a Worldwide plan to prevent these out of control birth rates we will indeed end up running out of natural resources, and first on the list is water. That’s right water, we do not have enough fresh water supplies to handle them all. It is for this reason that if we do not take birth control seriously, all will be lost.

In one report put out by the United Nations, it was estimated that there could be as many as double the current population by 2050. China recently, changed its one child per couple law and some are concerned that this could lead to an increased birth rate bolting the 1.3 Billion population in their nation. Indeed, it is for this reason that I hope all of you out there will think about it before creating more little human beings to enter our realm. Use contraceptives and practice birth control, for the future of the human race.

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Creative Use of Contraception

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Creative Use of Contraception Creative use of contraceptive technology has helped us manage a number of gynecologic as well as non-reproductive illnesses. This so called “off label” use often requires “outside the box” creative thinking. This is common in the practice of medicine as we realize benefits other than contraception for which these prescriptions were initially intended.

The “morning after pill,” which we call emergency contraception (EC), is a good example of utilizing the most widely prescribed class of medicine, oral contraceptives, off label. Refinement of the initial Yuzpe protocol shows that it can now be given up to 5 days from an episode of unprotected intercourse. The Plan B® preparation does not contain estrogen and consequently has far less nausea as a side effect, making it the drug of choice for EC. Dosing has been simplified to give both Plan B® tablets at once, rather than divided doses 12 hours apart. Liberal use of EC is felt to be one factor that has lead to a decrease in abortion rates. Should you need EC we will accommodate you on any weekday requested.

Extended use of oral contraceptives has been practiced for years to decrease the frequency women must endure menstrual related conditions, such as cramps, migraine headaches, or simply the inconvenience of having your period. A commercially available product, Seasonale® is marketed so you only have your period four times a year. Of course you can also use any level dosed pill currently on the market do similarly. New data show that the creative use of contraception is no need to regularly stop the medication until an episode of break through bleeding occurs. Then you should stop your pills for just two days, and then resume taking them daily. This allows for a shorter menstruation.

Finally while we’re stretching your mind about contraceptives, the Mirena® IUD, which releases a small amount of locally acting progesterone, offers great potential in the treatment of heavy periods. Progesterone keeps the inside lining of the uterus thin, which is the source of menstruation. Likewise, as many doctors are becoming increasingly suspicious of systemic progestins another potential use for Mirena® is part of hormone replacement therapy for menopause. So if you are interested in taking estrogen for all its benefits, you can use this IUD to protect the inside lining of your uterus from developing cancer as well as minimizing the nuisance of undesired bleeding. Mirena® last for five years.

So feel free to discuss these non-contraceptive uses of birth control as well as other ones with your doctor so you may enjoy benefits in addition to protection from an unplanned pregnancy.

Birth Control can be used to treat conditions from heavy periods to undesired menstrual symptoms.

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College Women Need Affordable Access to Birth Control Pills

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Women face choices every day. Paper or plastic? For here or to go? Birth control or Ramen? Wait, when did buying contraceptives instead of groceries become one of them? It wasn’t a decision women had to make until recently, when the Federal Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) went into effect. Now women have to pay much a month for birth control pills, when just a year ago they paid $10 or $15. Linda Lekawski, told us “It’s terrible because these are students who are working very hard to pay for their tuition and books at a time when tuition costs are edging up as well.”

We’re not alone. Time Magazine, the New York Times and The Houston Chronicle all reported on the rising price of birth control at universities all over the country because of the DRA. The interesting thing is this policy had nothing to do with birth control. The purpose of the law was to reduce the deficit, but it inadvertently changed the way pharmaceutical companies are able to sell prescriptions to universities. Before the law went into effect, pharmaceutical companies could sell contraceptives to university health centers and other safety net providers at a reduced price. The health centers could then pass the savings on to cash-strapped college students and low-income women. The DRA prohibits this, and now women have to decide whether they can buy gas, groceries or their medication. What’s worse is this particular change has no impact on reducing the deficit. The only presumed result is pharmaceutical companies are making even higher profits.

Birth control is basic health care for women. Not only is it over 99% effective at preventing unintended pregnancy, it also regulates a woman’s cycle and is used to treat cysts.

Most college women are focused on academics and working hard to prepare for a successful professional and personal future. Many of us plan to have families, but not while we’re in college. For some of us, our family planning means remaining abstinent, but for those young adults who are sexually active, affordable birth control means that they can stay healthy now and plan for their futures. College women shouldn’t be forced to decide between their current health care needs and groceries or even their long-term goals.

The great news is there is a solution to this problem. It’s called the Prevention through Affordable Access Act and it doesn’t cost the taxpayer one cent. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, knows a thing or two about being a successful professional woman and a mother. She should understand that family planning is an important facet of promoting women’s health and success and support this important bill.

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Generic Ortho Tri-Cyclen (Lynoral)

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

Ortho Tri-Cyclen (Lynoral) is an estrogen and progestin combination contraceptive pill used to prevent pregnancy. It may also be used to regulate the menstrual cycle, treat symptoms of menopause, or treat other conditions as determined by your doctor. The dosage of Ortho Tri-Cyclen, for the initial cycle of therapy is one active tablet administered daily from the 1st day through the 21st day of the menstrual cycle. Tablets are taken with-out interruption for 21 days. Then make an interruption for 7 days. After 28 days a new course is started the next day.

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Which Birth Control Method is the Most Effective?

Monday, May 26th, 2008

From the National Women’s Health Resource Center’s “Contraception: Ask the Experts” column

Before I give statistics, though, let me stress that any birth control method is only as good as the person using it. So, for instance, don’t expect your birth control pill to prevent pregnancy as well as it does in studies if you don’t take it as directed. And don’t expect a condom to work up to 90 percent of the time (as studies show) if your partner doesn’t put it on properly or use them every time you have intercourse-or come close to having intercourse.

The most effective forms of birth control are abstinence-not having sex-or sterilization. There are three forms of sterilization: vasectomy for men, in which the tubes through which sperm move into the penis are blocked or cut; tubal ligation for women, in which the fallopian tubes are blocked, burned or clipped shut; and Essure procedure for women, in which micro-inserts are placed into the fallopian tubes where they form a tissue barrier that prevents sperm from reaching the egg. Each is considered nearly 100 percent effective, and each is permanent.

The intrauterine device ParaGard also prevents pregnancy more than 99 percent of the time, and it can remain in place for up to 10 years. Another intrauterine device called Mirena has a similar efficacy rate, but it also releases the hormone progestin into your body. It may remain in place for up to five years. Another option in the 99-percent-or-more-effective category is Implanon, a tiny rod that is inserted into your arm where it releases a continuous amount of progestin to prevent pregnancy. It can remain in place up to three years.

Other hormone-related options, including birth control pills, the OrthoEvra patch, the NuvaRing vaginal ring and progestin injections like Depo-Provera, are considered “very effective,” meaning they prevent pregnancy 91 to 99 percent of the time. Depo-Provera works for three months; the others for one month.

These invasive options are followed by more moderately effective options, which typically prevent pregnancy 81 to 90 percent of the time. They include male and female condoms, the Today Sponge and a diaphragm.

The least effective category of birth control options, which typically prevent pregnancy up to 80 percent of the time, includes natural family planning, which you may know as the “rhythm method,” the cervical cap (FemCap or Lea’s Shield), and spermicide foams, creams, jellies, films and suppositories.

What’s right for you depends on your age and health, the type of relationship you’re in and your current concerns about pregnancy. I urge you to have a discussion with your health care professional about these issues and your various options before making any decision.

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Male Birth Control Pill 98% Effective

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

New research shows a new type of contraception for men in the form of a pill to be 98 percent effective, as effective as “the pill”.

Until recently, research into male contraception has involved hormone therapies that could have produced unwanted side effects. This new pill would consist of a chemical compound of a sugar molecule that could be put in a birth control pill or a patch.

The scientists researching this new form of birth control believe that the safest way to create a male equivalent of the commonly used female pill is to disable the sperm. The theory is that if you make the sperm unable to recognize the egg, fertilization cannot take place.

“Basically, what we’re trying to do, create, is a blind sperm; a sperm that can’t recognize an egg,” explained Dr. Joseph Hall, Ph.D. of the NSU Center for Biotechnology and Biomedical Sciences .

Although this chemical compound is about 92 percent effective in rats and 98 percent effective in the Petri dish, scientists say they want to get closer to the perfect male contraceptive.

It has taken Dr. Hall 18 years of research to get to this point and it may be a few more before tests are conducted on larger animals.

Meanwhile, a hormone-based male contraceptive, available in the form of a daily pill or a monthly injection is already available in many countries worldwide.

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Male Birth Control Pill May Soon Be Available In U.S.

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

A contraceptive for men might soon be available in the United States.

Doctors say it works much like the pill for women. It provides small doses of testosterone and progesterone to turn off hormones in the male brain that tell the body to produce sperm.

Men would take one daily. There is also an injectable form that could be taken once a month.

The contraceptive is said to be 98 percent effective in preventing pregnancy, as effective as the pill for women.

There haven’t been any long-term studies, so it is hard to elaborate on side effects, but health officials said it could cause weight gain.

An injectable and a pill form of male birth control is already available in other countries. it may be available in the United States as early as next year.

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Scientists Perfect Male Birth Control Pill

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Scientists are working on a new birth control pill made just for men.

According to a new report, scientists have developed a hormone therapy for men that’s 98% effective and works similarly to birth control pills for women.

However, researchers at Norfolk State University are taking a different approach to male contraception that, if successful, would not involve taking hormones.

The researchers believe that the safest and most user-friendly way to create a male birth control is to disable the sperm. The theory is that if you make the sperm unable to recognize the egg, you can’t have fertilization.

“Basically, what we’re trying to do, create, is a blind sperm; a sperm that can’t recognize an egg,” explained Dr. Joseph Hall, Ph.D. of the NSU Center for Biotechnology and Biomedical Sciences.

The researchers have come up with a chemical compound of a sugar molecule that could be put in a birth control pill or a patch. It is not a hormone, like some of their colleagues at other institutions are creating, that would stop the production of sperm. Instead, if stops the fertilization.

“We’ve used rats, which is about 92% effective, but in the Petri dish, it’s been about 98% effective.”

For the team at NSU’s Center for Biotechnology, that’s not good enough.

“However, in order to have a viable male contraceptive, you need to reach something like 100%,” said Dr. Hall.

So, it’s back to work, searching for the key to block, or blind, a few more nooks and crannies in the surface of the sperm that will result in that 100% male contraceptive.

It’s taken Dr. Hall 18 years to get to this point, and it could take two or three more years to begin experiments on larger animals.

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Birth Control Options

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Ok so I’ve had acne for about 6 years, and finally got rid of it a year ago after many visits to the dermatologist. Now I don’t use anything to treat it and I stay clear, except for an occasional blemish around that time of month. Problem is I’m worried about going on the pill. I was on Lo Estrin 3 years ago and it made my acne 10 times worse. I was taking it to treat the acne. Now I’m worried if I go on the pill it will cause me to have acne again, or if I go on it for a few years, after I stop taking it, then it may cause acne.

Any ideas what pill won’t cause me acne? I’m not looking for a pill to treat acne, just one that won’t cause it. I’d rather avoid the pills indicated for acne since they will likely be similar to Lo Estrin and I had a bad experience with that as mentioned. In my case would just be better to just stick with condoms? That worries me because its not as effective as the pill and I like the idea of the pill because I’m in control of my body.

Answer:

Ortho TriCyclen is great, and I never got any until I got on that pill. I am now on Ortho TriCyclen and love it!! I got on it after I asked around. It has been around a long time and I know lots of people who liked it. Also, it is low dose, which is great. I tried the Nuva Ring and hated it. I got really BAD cramps from it and almost passed out one time at work. I have also heard bad thing about Yaz. Several of my friends tried it and said it gave them bad PMS.

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The Case for Abstinence

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Plan B won’t work. It’s time to come up with Plan A.

When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in December that the teen birth rate in 2006 had increased by 3 percent over 2005, reversing a 15-year trend in which it had decreased, the finger-pointing began. And in many media outlets, the fingers were pointed squarely at abstinence education.

To pick one example, a New York Times reporter wrote that the finding “fueled the debate about whether the Bush administration’s abstinence-only education efforts were working.” The president of Planned Parenthood assured the Times that it isn’t.

Given the fact that abstinence-only education has been around for years and that this big change was sudden, it seems legitimate to ask if the right suspect has been fingered. And if abstinence- only education isn’t responsible, then what is? A case can be made that the culprit is something its supporters claim is the answer to unwanted pregnancies and abortions: Plan B— which also goes by the names emergency contraception and the morning-after pill.

To understand how this can possibly be, you have to look at the long-term effect on society of inexpensive and effective birth control, which is the element that makes comprehensive sex education different than abstinence- only. This is what Nobel Prizewinning economist George Akerlof, Janet L. Yellen and Michael L. Katz did in a 1996 paper titled “An Analysis of Out-of-Wedlock Childbearing in the United States.” They were searching for the reasons why there was a huge increase in illegitimate births, single motherhood and abortions after the mid-1960s. Some people blamed welfare, others the lack of jobs in some sectors of society. Akerlof et al put the onus on the pill and other new forms of contraception.

The pill’s big effect was on the relationship of men and women. Whereas men and women had always had premarital sex, before the advent of oral contraception there was an understanding that if the woman got pregnant the man would marry her. There was a study of birth and marriage records from the turn of the 20th century that showed that 30 percent to 50 percent of all first children were conceived before the wedding.

The pill, which became widely available in 1965, is called a “technology shock” that altered the relationship equation in several ways.

One is that if pregnancy is now the choice of the woman, then marriage and child support are now the choice of the man. Another is that the presence of women who will have premarital intercourse without an expectation of marriage — something the pill allows — put women who wanted to wait until marriage to have sex at a disadvantage in the competition for mates.

Francis Fukuyama wrote in his book, “The Great Disruption,” that the primary result of the sexual revolution kicked off by the pill was that men were no longer responsible for the women they got pregnant.

Among the results documented by Akerlof and his co-authors was a jump by 1970 in sexual activity among girls under the age of 16, the end of the shotgun marriage, the almost total disappearance of virgins at the altar and the increase in illegitimate births, single motherhood and abortions.

Birth rates among teens climbed and then skyrocketed in the late 1980s, hitting a peak of more than 60 women per thousand, ages 15 to 19, in 1991. From there the numbers declined through 2005. In a July 2007 story trumpeting the drop in 2005, the Washington Post credited primarily a roughly 50 percent increase in the number of high school students using condoms on their last encounter (46 percent in 1991 versus 63 percent in 2005) and to a lesser extent a 13.3 percent decline in the number of teens who reported having had sexual intercourse that year (54 percent in 1991 versus 47 percent in 2005).

Manipulating statistics can be done to support any point of view, but there are a few things we know that make the Post’s conclusions seem dubious. We know that a sexually active girl who uses no birth control has a 90 percent chance of getting pregnant in one year. We know that contraceptive failure rates among first-year users — primarily the young — are far higher than among the general population.

An article published in Family Planning Perspectives, which is related to Planned Parenthood, reports that the failure rate for condoms for first-year users is 15 percent. It also reports that failure rates are highest among cohabiting and other unmarried women, the poor and African- Americans. Girls greatly reduce their odds of getting pregnant if they use a condom during intercourse, but their odds of getting burned are still only about the same as surviving Russian roulette.

Abstinence also has been blamed for the huge increase in sexually transmitted diseases among the young. However, if condoms are supposed to make sex safe and we have seen a large increase in condom usage among the young, then we would expect to see a drop in STDs. This clearly has not happened.

We also know that 54 percent of all women having abortions used contraception in the month they got pregnant; of the women using condoms, 14 percent were using them correctly. Imperfect usage is the primary cause of contraceptive failure. What we also know is that those teens who did not have sexual intercourse had a 100 percent chance of not getting pregnant. How many of these teens were affected by an abstinence- only program? We have no way of knowing. But to those who claim abstinence education doesn’t work, the Heritage Foundation published a list of 10 programs that significantly reduced, among other things, teen pregnancy, the age of first intercourse and sexual activity.

One example is the Not Me, Not Now program in Monroe County that targeted 9-to 14- year-olds. It recorded a drop in the sexual activity rate from 46.6 percent to 31.6 percent and a drop in the pregnancy rate for girls ages 15 through 17 from 63.4 pregnancies per 1,000 girls to 49.5 pregnancies per 1,000.

There are reasons abstinence-only programs can’t be 100 percent effective. They are dwarfed in numbers by comprehensive sexual education programs, so their effectiveness is mitigated because girls are still under pressure to have sex in the competition for boyfriends. The reason three out of four teen girls (and half of teen boys) give for having intercourse is their boyfriends wanted them to. But this isn’t anything new.

What is new is the growing presence of Plan B. Newsweek reported in 2006 that “Planned Parenthood gave out about 1 million emergency contraceptives— most were Plan B— in 2004, up from 75,000 in 1999.” It also said that some college students were using it as their primary birth control and that having it on hand made them “less reliant on traditional birth control.”

This is a recipe for disaster. The Newsweek story said Plan B is 90 percent effective, which is way below the effectiveness levels of other oral contraceptives, but that rate is in question. A 2007 story in Gynecology and Obstetrics states, “the published efficacy figures — on average, approximately 80 percent — may overstate actual efficacy, possibly quite substantially. Clearly, if the method is weakly efficacious, it is unlikely to produce a major reduction in unintended pregnancy no matter how often women use it.”

But if more young women are using it and it is far less effective at preventing pregnancy, we can expect to see an increase in unwanted pregnancies. Plan B is a sham in other ways. In that same article in Gynecology and Obstetrics, the man who claimed Plan B would reduce unwanted pregnancies by 50 percent, James Tressell, has “conceded that 23 published studies from 10 countries disprove his claim. According to every one of the 23 studies, published between 1998 and 2006, easier access to EC fails to achieve any statistically significant reduction in rates of unintended pregnancy and abortion.”

Here are a few things we know about girls under the age of 14 having sex. The organization Preventing Teen Pregnancy reports it is almost universally unwanted by the girls. A study of girls in California and the males who got them pregnant, by Mike Males at the University of California- Irvine, showed that the girls were vulnerable in that they “may want to become ‘adults’ more quickly to escape an unhappy or deprived home environment” and that the fathers were older men (the younger the mother, the larger the age group between her and the father).

Of the mothers from 11 to 15 years old, 91 percent of the fathers were older — not peers — and 50 percent of the males were beyond high school age. Among all teen mothers, 68 percent of the fathers were over the age of 20.

In a study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology on the role of male sexual partners and relationships in determining whether women seek emergency contraception when needed, it was found that “factors measuring power dynamics, such as male dominant decision making and pressure for sex as well as a strong desire to avoid pregnancy on the part of the male partner have a significant association with the use of EC. However, relationship factors known to be associated with use of other contraceptive methods, such as communication, satisfaction and commitment, show no association with EC use.”

Plan B leaves vulnerable young girls, whose only weapon against the unwanted sexual advances of men is the fear of pregnancy, defenseless. The man can say, “Call me tonight and take two pills in the morning.” The problem is, those pills don’t work as well as advertised. Our society’s response to teen pregnancy has been to address the symptoms and not the cause. A middle school in Portland, Maine, responded to pregnancies among its students by making birth control pills available to girls as young as 11. Texas Gov. Rick Perry issued an executive order making it mandatory that all girls entering sixth grade in 2008 be vaccinated with Gardasil, which prevents some forms of cervical cancer that are caused by the STD human papilloma virus. This just keeps us on a path that is leading in the wrong direction, a path that is having a negative impact on the welfare of our country.

STDs have become epidemic and, according to a March 2006 article in Newsweek, are in part to blame for a 20 percent increase of infertility among the young since 2005. Suicide rates among sexually active teens are much higher than among those who abstain. And the incidence of single motherhood is increasing in all age groups.

The percentage of children born to unwed mothers has jumped from 5.8 percent in 1960 to 36 percent today. The percentage in the African- American community is nearly 80 percent. Single motherhood is the most common determining factor among those living in poverty, and with it comes a host of social problems and expenses.

Akerlof and his co-authors wrote that the pill, which carried such promise, led slowly to the feminization of poverty. But they also point out that turning back the clock on birth control would only exacerbate the problem, exposing women to men who, as cultural anthropologist Lionel Tiger put it, have come to expect uncommitted intercourse if only because that is their experience. Akerlof proposes mandatory child support as a way of forcing young men to take some responsibility for the children they father.

Recent headlines, in the wake of the pregnancy of 16-year-old Jamie Lynn Spears, have shouted that teen pregnancy has become cool. There is no longer any stigma attached to single motherhood. All of this is harmful to women.

We need to restore the sense of commitment between sexually active people that was the norm before the advent of the pill. To do that we need a commitment from all areas of society. It will take an effort on the scale of the no-smoking campaign and it will take time.

We have the 43 years since the start of the sexual revolution to undo. We have made smokers pariahs, banned them from public places and shown through graphic television commercials the physical effects of their behavior. We can do the same thing to attack teen pregnancy.

Call it abstinence, call it character-based, call it comprehensive, but it won’t succeed unless we find a way to instill a feeling of responsibility into young men toward young women, who have borne the brunt of our safe sex policies. We should teach men to respect women, and not have intercourse with them until they are ready to care for the life they may be creating.

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