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- <text id=91TT1783>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: Why Isn't Our Birth Control Better?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 52
- Why Isn't Our Birth Control Better?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Policies, politics and prudery are making it harder for Americans
- to control their own reproduction--especially compared with
- Europeans
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-DeWitt--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington,
- Tom Curry/Chicago and Edwin M. Reingold/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> A portrait in American fecundity: every day hundreds of
- young women, their bodies roundly pregnant, descend on the
- University of Southern California Women's Hospital. They
- overflow the available chairs and sprawl awkwardly on the floor.
- They come for prenatal checkups, gynecological care and,
- finally, to deliver their young. Last year more than 18,000
- babies were born in this building, roughly 1 out of every 200
- babies born in the U.S. "Sometimes they are lined up in the
- hallways and stacked up for C-sections like planes at LAX, six
- or seven deep," says obstetrician-gynecologist David Grimes.
- </p>
- <p> But this busiest of U.S. obstetrics units also symbolizes
- an American failure: the extent to which the birth control
- revolution has not fulfilled its promise in the country where
- it began. Three decades after the Pill was introduced in the
- U.S., a shocking number of the 58 million American women of
- childbearing age still find it difficult to control their own
- reproduction, especially compared with women in other countries.
- Teenage pregnancy in the U.S. is more than double that of
- European countries, and the nation's abortion rate--1.6
- million a year--is one of the highest in the developed world.
- All told, more than half of all American pregnancies--3.4
- million out of 6 million each year--are accidents, the result
- of misusing contraceptives, using unreliable contraceptives or
- using no contraceptives at all.
- </p>
- <p> The sorry state of birth control in America is underscored
- in a report prepared by the Population Crisis Committee, a
- nonprofit research group based in Washington. The committee
- found not only that Americans have fewer contraceptive options
- than their counterparts in most developed countries, but also
- that contraceptive devices are more expensive and more difficult
- to obtain in the U.S. than in some parts of the Third World.
- </p>
- <p> While scientists around the globe are making rapid
- progress deciphering the dance of hormones that makes pregnancy
- possible--work that raises new strategies for blocking
- conception--the major American pharmaceutical companies have
- all but abandoned the field. Of the nine doing research in
- contraceptives 20 years ago, only one (Ortho Pharmaceutical) is
- still active. The others have been scared off by the fear of
- costly lawsuits like the one that drove the maker of the Dalkon
- Shield, an intra uterine device, into bankruptcy, and by public
- controversy such as that surrounding RU-486, the French
- "abortion pill."
- </p>
- <p> Most of the world's governments encourage family planning
- and even subsidize the use of birth control devices. The U.S.
- stands out as the only major industrialized country that is
- moving in the opposite direction. Over the past decade,
- Washington has halted federal research on new reproductive
- technologies and declined to approve some of the most promising
- new methods of birth control.
- </p>
- <p> There have been some improvements in U.S. contraceptive
- options, but they have been incremental rather than
- revolutionary. Manufacturers of the Pill have developed low-dose
- versions that avoid most of the side effects associated with
- earlier varieties. IUDs have improved greatly in the past decade
- and are now about as safe and effective as the Pill. And owing
- largely to the fear of AIDS, the condom, which dates back to the
- age of the Pharaohs, has come out from behind the pharmacists'
- counters and is now prominently displayed at stores across the
- U.S. in various colors, shapes and sizes.
- </p>
- <p> Even the Food and Drug Administration-sanctioned Norplant--the long-lasting hormone implant hailed as the first new
- contraceptive device approved for use in the U.S. in three
- decades--is really a repackaging of the same chemical used in
- the Pill. Norplant is housed in matchstick-size tubes and
- inserted under the skin of a woman's arm. Its main advantage is
- that it does not depend on someone's remembering to take it
- every day. But it can cause irregular bleeding, and its cost (up
- to $1,000) puts it out of the price range of many who need it.
- </p>
- <p> In Europe sexually active couples can choose from a wide
- selection of contraceptive approaches that includes more than
- two dozen different kinds of pills, monthly and bimonthly
- contraceptive injections, and an IUD that boosts its
- effectiveness with the slow release of hormones. The big news
- this summer is Britain's decision to become the second country--after France--to approve the sale of RU-486, the
- controversial postcoital contraceptive.
- </p>
- <p> Carl Djerassi, the Stanford chemist who helped develop the
- original Pill in the early 1950s, calls RU-486 "the single most
- important new development in contraception of the past two
- decades." Reason: it gives women, for the first time, a
- relatively safe way to avoid pregnancy after they have had
- unprotected intercourse--thus fully removing the decision to
- exercise birth control from the decision to have sex. Basically,
- RU-486 is a menses inducer. Used in conjunction with a
- prostaglandin, it brings on a woman's period whether or not she
- is pregnant. Although there has been one death associated with
- its use (triggered by an allergic reaction to the
- prostaglandin), it is considered fairly safe. Several states,
- including conservative New Hampshire, are lining up to become
- test sites to speed its adoption in the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> That is not likely to happen soon. Right-to-life groups
- have made opposition to the "French death pill" a rallying cry
- and have vowed to boycott not just it but all products made by
- any drug company that dares distribute it in the U.S. They
- argue that the notion of postcoital birth control is just
- abortion by another name; in addition, they are not enamored of
- the idea of separating sex from its consequences. "The problem
- is not that contraceptives are not available; the problem is
- that many people are not behaving responsibly," says Allan
- Carlson, president of the traditionalist Rockford Institute.
- </p>
- <p> That attitude, which has come to dominate federal policy,
- indicates that the real dispute in America is not so much about
- abortion or contraception as it is about sex and values.
- American culture is a strange blend of prurience and prudery
- that tends to lead to the worst of both worlds: movies and
- magazines that exploit sex and teach kids that it's glamorous
- and free of consequences, combined with a skittish denial of the
- facts of life that makes it hard to teach those kids how not to
- get pregnant.
- </p>
- <p> "Many American women are grossly misinformed," says
- U.S.C.'s Grimes. For instance, 31% of American women in a 1985
- Gallup poll indicated their belief that birth control pills
- cause cancer, when in fact the evidence shows that for
- nonsmokers the Pill actually reduces the risk of ovarian and
- endometrial cancer. Europeans are much better at putting sex--and birth control--in its place. Despite their Roman Catholic
- heritage, the French schools conscientiously provide sex
- education during which birth control and abortion are frankly
- discussed.
- </p>
- <p> It would be a mistake, however, to blame the paucity of
- new contraceptive devices in the U.S. just on puritanical
- attitudes and conservatism. One group that would have been
- expected to be contraception's natural constituency, feminists,
- has been more vocal in pointing out the dangers of various
- devices than in promoting their use. The positive result was the
- development of the new low-dose pills. The negative effect was
- that thousands of women abandoned the Pill altogether.
- </p>
- <p> The National Academy of Sciences last year called for an
- infusion of federal dollars into contraceptive research, better
- sex-education programs and protection from liability suits for
- manufacturers who want to get back into the birth control
- business. But under the current Administration such actions are
- unlikely. Meanwhile, sexually active Americans are often left
- with an inadequate range of options: make the best of the
- contraceptives they have, choose to be sterilized, or turn to
- abortion when all else fails. With the last option under
- increasing legal challenge, the choices at the turn of the
- century are likely to be narrower than they are today.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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