I thought this was a good article. Women should be informed about these things- we really should!! It's tragic how couples have been victimized by the pharmaceutical companies and often their own doctors for profit.
I have questions for doctors and OB/GYN's:
Where in medicine do you give someone medication for a perfectly healthy condition?
I did ask this one to my OB and his answer was.... silence. Yep.
In regards to prescribing the pill (a group 1, cancer-causing carcinogen) for minor health issues like 'painful periods'- Wouldn't cancer be more painful than any period?
How many teenage boys and young adult men do you prescribe steroids (the bc pill is a steriod) for their 'health' or for rendering them infertile?
Hmm????
Anyway, here's the article:
A Foolish
Inconsistency on Contraception
By Susan E. Wills, Esq.
Here’s a riddle for readers. There are drugs so safe, so
effective and so essential to women’s well-being that they are recommended for
continual use by all healthy women 15-45 (or thereabouts) for 30 years or more,
and that almost every employee health plan will soon have to provide them “for
free” under the Preventive Services mandate of the Affordable Care Act.
But these same drugs have twice been determined, by the U.S.
Preventive Services Task Force (Task Force), to be too dangerous for doctors to
prescribe long-term to healthy women above age 45 or so. In middle-aged and
older women, they are to be used only for the shortest possible time, at the
lowest possible dose. What could these
Jekyll-and-Hyde drugs be?
Okay, it was a trick question. The synthetic hormones
estrogen and progestin—used as combined oral contraceptives (COCs) by most
fertile women, and in hormone replacement therapy (HRT) by
menopausal/post-menopausal women—are onlypromoted as being safe and benign. In
reality, whether used in COCs or in HRT, they’re more like the sinister Mr.
Hyde.
After reviewing the latest research on the risks and
benefits of pills containing estrogen and progestin, the Task Force offered a
sobering recommendation: “Do not prescribe combined estrogen and progestin for
the prevention of chronic conditions” (emphasis in the original Clinical
Summary).
Yet in its 2011 contraceptive mandate, the Institute of
Medicine treated fertility like a “chronic condition” that had to be managed
with synthetic hormones (to prevent pregnancy) for upwards of thirty years! Now
the Task Force concludes that when taken as HRT, these hormones significantly
increase the risk of serious adverse events in healthy women, compared to
matched controls who received placebos.
The increased risks for women using HRT (compared to matched
controls) are 26% for invasive breast cancer, 41% for stroke, 61% for
gallbladder disease, 205% for probable dementia, 207% for deep vein thrombosis
(DVT) and 213% for pulmonary embolism (PE).
Is there any medical reason for these inconsistent
recommendations and warnings? Are younger women immune to the adverse effects
simply because of their age? No.
Research has shown that, at any age, whether in COCs or HRT,
progestin is associated with increased risk of DVT ,
PE , heart attacks, strokes and problems of
the liver and eyes. The main difference is that it’s easier to measure the
onset and progression of these diseases and conditions in older women because
they are more prevalent with age.
Could the dramatically increased risks be caused by higher
doses of hormones in HRT than in COCs? No. Typical COCs contain far more
progestin that HRT pills. Loestrin, for example, has three times more
norethindrone acetate than Femhrt and Activela (HRT pills). Yasmin (another
COC) contains six times more drospirenone than Angeliq (an HRT pill), and Ortho
Tricyclen contains 2.8 times more norgestimate than Prefest (an HRT pill). Estradiol, the estrogen used in most COCs and
in HRT, is associated with increased risk of breast cancer, endometrial cancer
and gallbladder disease. Although the amount of estradiol in HRT pills is
higher than the amount in in COCs, women “rarely have severe side effects from
taking estrogens to replace estrogen,” according to the Mayo Clinic
website—unlike premenopausal girls and women who are given synthetic estrogen
on top of the estrogen they produce naturally.
Is it too much to ask that the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) be consistent with respect to the two uses of
estrogen/progestin? Could they not put the health of young women ahead of the
interests of drug manufacturers, Planned Parenthood and those obsessed with
divorcing sex from its natural consequences? Women deserve honest answers to
these questions. HHS should be warning them about the risks of combined
estrogen/progestin in contraceptives, as in HRT, not forcing almost every woman
in America to
pay for it in her health coverage.
Susan Wills is Assistant Director for Education &
Outreach, Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops. Go to www.usccb.org/prolife to learn more about the bishops' pro-life
activities.