Listener:
Pope Paul VI is also the pope who wrote Humanae Vitae, the encyclical on birth control. In it, he says that birth control pills may be used for medical reasons.
At that time it was not known that the Pill was abortifacient. At that time the formulation of the Pill included such high doses of hormones that it did in fact supress ovulation. That is not the case with today’s pills, which have significantly lower doses of hormones and have much higher rates of break through ovulation.
Listener:
People argue that birth control pills only mask the symptoms. Well, I am on medication for high cholesterol. My medication “masks the symptoms” by making my cholesterol go down while I am taking this pill. If I quit this statin drug, I’m pretty sure that my cholesterol will go back up again. This is true of many drugs.
This may be the case with your cholesterol drug, but it’s not relevant to the discussion about the pill as it is not an abortifacient drug.
Most doctors prescribe the Pill before doing any other tests or treatments. There are alternatives, they do not explore them. That is wrong.
Listener:
One of the moderators stated on another thread that these forums should not be used to solve medical problems. I agree. If your doctor says you should go on birth control pills for medical reasons, then maybe you should.
And, maybe you should get a second opinion. And, no one has given specific medical advice-- other than to get another opinion-- the advice she was asking for was of a moral nature, not medical.
Listener:
I think that many people on these forums don’t understand the severe pain and bleeding that many women have. I understand, because I had the problem myself many years ago. It can be so severe that you can’t function. Some women have the choice between going on the pill or having a hysterectomy…
That is your opinion. I believe that many women
do understand, including me. The OP was asking for a moral evaluation of this option, and we have given her one. Yes, hysterectomy may be a solution in some cases.
Listener:
Many people suggest the Pope Paul VI Institute. Well, that is fine if you happen to live near the place. Most people are stuck with whatever doctors happen to be in the network for their insurance coverage.
PPVI will consult long distance, and in many instances can refer to a doctor in your area who is knowledgable and affiliated with their methods. I live in a very rural area, the nearest town has less than 5,000 people, and there is a Creighton/PPVI trained doctor in that town. You never know until you call them and ask.
Listener:
As far as losing a very early pregnancy goes, this would not be something the woman intends. She would be on the pill to solve a severe medical problem. If she lost a pregnancy as a result, she would not know it. It would not be her fault. In fact, I read in a medical book put out by the Mayo Clinic that 50% of all fertilized eggs don’t “take.” This is true for women who are not on the pill. Maybe this happens because the woman ate the wrong thing - there would be no way anyone would know.
First, by your logic a miscarriage and an abortion in the first weeks are the same thing because so many pregnancies are lost early on.
This is, in fact, an argument used by pro-abortion groups: it’s not really a baby, and why would God let 50% of conceived babies die in miscarriages if it were? Therefore, go ahead and abort your blob of cells b/c so many miscarry anyway it can’t be wrong.
Well, the answer is, we do not know why many tiny embryos do not implant or are not sustained in the early weeks. However, what we do know is any early miscarriage is a natural event and no action has been taken to attack and kill the baby. Not so with a drug that make the womb hostile. It matters not if a woman “knows” that the pregnancy occurred in that month and was aborted-- she took an action she knew would lead to it.