Women deserve safer options in birth control

May 5th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

birth20control 100x100 Women deserve safer options in birth controlThe contraceptive business has boomed since the birth control pill hit the market 50 years ago. Now birth control comes in the form of pills, patches, rings, implants and intrauterine devices, and the makers of such products claim they are even safer than before. Judging by the thousands lawsuits filed by women who claim they suffered life-threatening blood clots, strokes and gallbladder problems because of the contraceptives, safety may still be an issue. But Salon.com opinion editor Geraldine Sealey claims birth control pills brought on another, less known, side effect – the loss of her libido.

“I hate the pill. Hormonal contraception, which covers birth control pills and nearly every other highly effective method on the market, murders my libido. I say that with as much certainty as I can, given the murky, multi-variate thing that is the human sex drive,” she writes in a post titled Why I hate the pill. “I’ve experimented with several pills, hoping that any slight variation in hormonal ingredients would yield a contraceptive that worked without neutering me. Each doused my interest in sex as completely as the other. Although a libido-destroying pill does wonders to lower your pregnancy risk, it’s also done a number on my relationships, self-esteem and emotional well-being.”

Sealey says she didn’t find relief from her problem when switching to other forms of birth control. Nothing seemed to be the right “fit.” But she makes a good point. “If you’re like me, you assume that someone, somewhere is figuring all of this out — that there will be a new kind birth control discovered or invented at some point because that’s just how human progress rolls on. I mean, they’re already working on another iPad. Surely, some lab rat is putting the finishing touches on the next breakthrough in contraception.”

Unfortunately, Sealey says, any prospect for the development of innovative birth control methods have stopped dead in their tracks. “According to a 2008 report by Harper and several colleagues, public and private funds for contraceptive research have dried up in recent years. Most pharmaceutical companies have withdrawn from investing in contraceptive R&D, perhaps due to fears of costly personal injury litigation. And those fears aren’t necessarily unfounded. A reported 1,100 lawsuits have been filed in the United States against Bayer HealthCare alone, mostly by women claiming health problems such as blood clots, strokes, heart attacks and gall bladder disease after taking the popular pills Yaz and Yasmin.”

Perhaps the key is not finding new methods, but making the ones currently marketed to women safer to use.

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