View Full Version : Birthcontrol pill
D. Medvedev Fan
October 7th 2007, 03:40 PM
Birth control pills work by the following method: "The estrogen works by preventing an egg from being released from the ovaries most of the time. Both the estrogen and progesterone make the uterus a hostile environment for an embryo by causing a thinning of the uterine lining. As modern combination pills contain less estrogen than their predecessors, an egg will be released by the ovaries 2-10% of the time. If fertilization takes the embryo will be unable to implant in the uterus, resulting in the death of the embryo. "
http://www.contracept.info/pill.php
I recently read somewhere that the rate of failure for birth control pills to prevent pregnancy is about 2-3% and with another form of contraceptive is about 0.001%
Should birth control pills ever be allowed to a woman who is married or having sex?
yxboom
October 8th 2007, 04:03 AM
Birth control pills work by the following method: "The estrogen works by preventing an egg from being released from the ovaries most of the time. Both the estrogen and progesterone make the uterus a hostile environment for an embryo by causing a thinning of the uterine lining. As modern combination pills contain less estrogen than their predecessors, an egg will be released by the ovaries 2-10% of the time. If fertilization takes the embryo will be unable to implant in the uterus, resulting in the death of the embryo. "
http://www.contracept.info/pill.php
I recently read somewhere that the rate of failure for birth control pills to prevent pregnancy is about 2-3% and with another form of contraceptive is about 0.001%
Should birth control pills ever be allowed to a woman who is married or having sex?
there are many forms of birth control: pills, condoms, cycle method, bad hygiene. the methods that are abortifacient are the ones that i would council against. as there is a huge difference to be distinguished between fertilization prevention and fertilization destruction. birth control methods such as condoms and bad hygiene attempt to prevent fertilization from taking place. being really ugly no longer is the most effective means of birth control since man has invented beer goggles.
D. Medvedev Fan
October 9th 2007, 02:06 AM
there are many forms of birth control: pills, condoms, cycle method, bad hygiene. the methods that are abortifacient are the ones that i would council against. as there is a huge difference to be distinguished between fertilization prevention and fertilization destruction. birth control methods such as condoms and bad hygiene attempt to prevent fertilization from taking place. being really ugly no longer is the most effective means of birth control since man has invented beer goggles.
But you wouldn't try to make it illegal?
Minnesota
October 9th 2007, 04:38 AM
Should birth control pills ever be allowed to a woman who is married or having sex?
No. Let's limit birth control pills to those who are not married and not having sex.
D. Medvedev Fan
October 9th 2007, 11:00 PM
No. Let's limit birth control pills to those who are not married and not having sex.
How would that be enforced?
What if a woman could die if she has another child? Should the state pay for a surgery if she can't yet or should she and her husband just go without sex for a long time?
What if it is the only relief a woman can get from menstral cramps? (I recently read that a menstral cramp can be up to 2 or 3 times as bad as a labor cramp.)
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