Scientific News Health care Diagnostics of diseases KINSEY STUDY FINDS ADVERSE SEXUAL, EMOTIONAL SIDE EFFECTS OF BIRTH CONTROL PILLS RELATED TO DISCONTINUATION
KINSEY
STUDY FINDS ADVERSE SEXUAL, EMOTIONAL SIDE EFFECTS OF BIRTH CONTROL PILLS
RELATED TO DISCONTINUATION
The
birth control pill can have significant adverse effects on sexuality and mood in
some women, increasing the likelihood of early discontinuation, according to a
study by the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction at Indiana
University. Results of the study will be reported in the July issue of the
journal Contraception.
Stephanie
Sanders, associate director of the Kinsey Institute and an IU
faculty member in gender studies, directed the study of 80 women. The research
team included John Bancroft and Jennifer Bass of the Kinsey Institute and
Cynthia Graham of the IU Department of Psychology.
Of
the women in the study who started on the pill (randomly assigned to either
orthocyclen or orthotricyclen), 38 percent were still taking it after one year,
47 percent had stopped, and 14 percent had switched to another pill. The women
who stopped or changed to another pill were four times as likely to report
adverse sexual, emotional and physical side effects as the women who continued
with their oral contraceptive. Some of these effects included decrease in sexual
thoughts, less frequent intercourse and negative mood changes.
"It
is clear in our results that the women who stopped or changed to another pill
had more sexual, emotional and physical side effects than the women who
continued with their oral contraceptive," Sanders said.
The
authors noted that, despite 40 years of use, there is no way of predicting which
women are likely to experience adverse mood or sexuality effects from oral
contraceptives, or which oral contraceptive formulations are more likely to be
responsible.
"Studies
on the male contraceptive pill, still in the developmental phase, have already
included evaluation of possible effects on sexuality, but women have not had the
benefit of such information in making contraceptive decisions," Sanders
said.
The
authors called for further research to identify predictors of such adverse
effects and to understand the hormonal mechanisms responsible for such effects.
In the meantime, they said, women should be fully informed, and clinicians
should discuss potential effects of oral contraceptives on sexuality and mood
with their patients.
Contact:
Stephanie Sanders, 812-855-7686, sanders@indiana.edu
Source
of the given news and the copyrights belong to a Indiana
University
Publishing date: August 7, 2001
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