Use of contraceptives to actually aid in conception?

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I recently had a conversation with an atheist friend who for some reason saw fit to tell me that she was on what she at least claimed was contraceptives, which I thought was strange because she isn’t romantically involved with anybody now. When I asked why she was using them, she explained to me that it regulates her cycle. This made me think about something I had thought about asking on here a few times before, but didn’t because I thought what I would have asked didn’t actually make any sense. But because of what my friend told me, I’ve decided now that I now, in fact, will ask it on here. If there are artificial contraceptives that allow ovulation to take place at regular intervals (as opposed to preventing ovulation, which is what I thought they were designed to do until now), would that actually make it easier to conceive? If so, would this be compatible with Church Doctrine, then?
 
That is a medical use, not a contraceptive use. The same medications that are appropriate for a single woman who has no sex life at all are OK for a married woman who is using them for the same reasons and does not have other options that take her situation into account. In that case, the contraceptive effect of the medication is an unintended side effect when there are not non-contraceptive options for achieving the same treatment goals. (Medications that could have the effect of causing birth defects are another matter, as the risk is zero to the patients with no likelihood of getting pregnant but finite in women of child-bearing age who do have sexual relations from time to time.)
 
It depends on what contraceptives you mean. For example a doctor will tell you that the pill will regulate your cycle.
What this actually means is that the pill stop all ovulation but you have a bleed that seems like a period but is not.
Im not sure about the coil - I think Orthodox Jewish women use this is it stops all bleeding and so they do not have to keep away from their husbands. So again ‘regulation’ other than stopping the ovulation.
 
When I asked why she was using them, she explained to me that it regulates her cycle.
Ignorance of female reproduction abounds, particularly among those who have a vested interest in understanding it: females.
If there are artificial contraceptives that allow ovulation to take place at regular intervals (as opposed to preventing ovulation, which is what I thought they were designed to do until now), would that actually make it easier to conceive?
There is no such thing.

If there were such a thing, by definition it would not be a contraceptive.
If so, would this be compatible with Church Doctrine, then?
Hormonal treatments designed to stimulate ovulation, such as Clomid, are not contraceptives and they are morally licit when used to aid and not replace the marital embrace. They correct a defect, which is morally licit.
 
No contraceptive restores ovulation.
“Regulating” a cycle does not just mean restoring ovulation. It can also mean forcing the cycle into a frame that will reduce an unacceptably heavy menstrual flow or an unacceptably short time between one menstruation and the next. (This I have heard from a professor of gynecology who suggested such a treatment as an option for me.)

Whether a particular use of medications that can also be used for their contraceptive effect would be appropriate for a married woman depends on whether the goal of the treatment and the presence of other options warrants acceptance of the unintended contraceptive side effect. A single woman does not have to concern herself with that possibility any more than she has to concern herself with side effects of a drug that could harm her developing child if she were to become pregnant during treatment.
 
“Regulating” a cycle does not just mean restoring ovulation. It can also mean forcing the cycle into a frame that will reduce an unacceptably heavy menstrual flow or an unacceptably short time between one menstruation and the next. (This I have heard from a professor of gynecology who suggested such a treatment as an option for me.)

Whether a particular use of medications that can also be used for their contraceptive effect would be appropriate for a married woman depends on whether the goal of the treatment and the presence of other options warrants acceptance of the unintended contraceptive side effect. A single woman does not have to concern herself with that possibility any more than she has to concern herself with side effects of a drug that could harm her developing child if she were to become pregnant during treatment.
I agree, but was answering OP’s question.
 
It doesn’t make her ovulate regularly. It makes her menstrual cycle predictable.
Actually that isn’t what it does at all. A person taking hormonal pills (i.e. “Birth Control Pills”) doesn’t have a menstrual cycle.
 
Actually that isn’t what it does at all. A person taking hormonal pills (i.e. “Birth Control Pills”) doesn’t have a menstrual cycle.
:confused: Years ago I took birth control pills to regulate my menstrual cycle, and I did indeed have one. Although many years later I found it would have been perfectly healthy to regulate it to several months of no period instead of just 3 weeks. And the benefit of that is why I call this time of my life “blessed” menopause. 😃
 
:confused: Years ago I took birth control pills to regulate my menstrual cycle, and I did indeed have one. Although many years later I found it would have been perfectly healthy to regulate it to several months of no period instead of just 3 weeks. And the benefit of that is why I call this time of my life “blessed” menopause. 😃
I think what was being said was that you don’t get a “real” period. Yes, you will bleed at a certain TOM, but it’s not a true cycle.

hormonesmatter.com/pill-bleeds-periods/
 
:confused: Years ago I took birth control pills to regulate my menstrual cycle, and I did indeed have one.
No, this is not medically accurate.

Hormones complete suppress and replace the menstrual cycle.

What you experienced was withdrawal bleeding, not a menstrual period. The withdrawal bleeding is caused by the placebo pills. Newer forms of hormones have no placebos and therefore no bleeding.
Although many years later I found it would have been perfectly healthy to regulate it to several months of no period instead of just 3 weeks.
You did not have a period.
 
No contraceptive restores ovulation.
Of course they don’t…they are designed to destroy fertility.

Best to go to a real doctor who prescribes natural hormones and not synthetic, which is what the pill contains.
 
No, this is not medically accurate.

Hormones complete suppress and replace the menstrual cycle.

What you experienced was withdrawal bleeding, not a menstrual period. The withdrawal bleeding is caused by the placebo pills. Newer forms of hormones have no placebos and therefore no bleeding.

You did not have a period.
but I thought it was permissible to use the pill for medical reasons.

not that I am completely knowledgeable of all the reproductive issues that can happen to a person but certain people do get extremely heavy bleeding
 
but I thought it was permissible to use the pill for medical reasons.

not that I am completely knowledgeable of all the reproductive issues that can happen to a person but certain people do get extremely heavy bleeding
It is permissable to utilize it for medical reasons. However, it’s important to note that it doesn’t truly fix any medical issues, but instead masks the symptoms.
 
It is permissable to utilize it for medical reasons. However, it’s important to note that it doesn’t truly fix any medical issues, but instead masks the symptoms.
By “fix medical issues” do you mean completely cure them? Well, very few medications actually do that. Antibiotics that are used to treat bacterial infections, I guess. Chemotherapy, maybe, when it does work – but it often does not.

But, blood pressure pills don’t cure hypertension. Insulin doesn’t cure diabetes. Etc, etc.

But that doesn’t mean the Catholic Church frowns upon such medications or obligates every Catholic to try “natural methods” first (even for diseases such as hypertension or diabetes where some natural methods can help a lot). It certainly does NOT forbid the use of pain medications that are expressly designed to “mask the symptom” of pain, not actually fix the underlying cause. Because sadly, not all causes of pain can be cured.

Whenever this issue comes up I notice many Catholics see the Pill the same way some Baptist see “demon rum”. Or how some secular humanists see “demon guns”.

But since unfortunately many posters have left CAF and won’t be challenging the “demon Pill” narrative. Let me note that there some reproductive issues that cannot be cured even with “natural” treaments, and apparently per many who have experienced “Napro” many Napro practitioners rely heavily on surgery – hardly a “natural” treatment IMHO.

I think the use of hormonal treatments to treat medical conditions are mostly a question of prudence and self-searching to ask, “Is the contraceptive effect of this medication, something that I’m just tolerating, or eagerly accepting as a loophole in Church teaching?” Since I have certainly come across my share of Catholics who proudly state that they have a “medical reason” to take the Pill and happily embrace the contraceptive effects as a side benefit, and that strikes me as a tad bit legalistic.

But I also know that many Catholics do prayerfully decide that medications with contraceptive effects are indeed licit in their situation.
 
It is permissable to utilize it for medical reasons. However, it’s important to note that it doesn’t truly fix any medical issues, but instead masks the symptoms.
^ this

A doctor I went to told me this. He used to answer questions about the pill on ewtn’s q& a site

I now have a wonderful doctor at ppvi institute.
 
^ this

A doctor I went to told me this. He used to answer questions about the pill on ewtn’s q& a site

I now have a wonderful doctor at ppvi institute.
Not everyone can afford to go to PPVI Institute. And again, last I checked the Church does NOT impose an obligation for anyone to do so.

I think there are reasons of prudence to not just blindly accept hormonal treatments without asking your doctor about the risks, benefits, alternatives, etc. But that would be the case for ANY medical treatment.
 
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