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Making Sense of Bioethics: Column 150: The "Bitter Pill" of False Liberation

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A major study published on December 7 in the New England Journal of Medicine concludes that hormonal contraception increases the risk of breast cancer for women. The research used all of Denmark as its sample, following nearly 1.8 million Danish women of child­bearing age for over a decade. The study, as described by the New York Times, “upends widely held assump­tions about modern contraceptives for younger generations of women,” especially the view that “newer hormonal contraceptives are much safer than those taken by their mothers or grandmothers.” It also establishes that the risk to women increases with longer peri­ods of use. Major media outlets have done their best to minimize the implications of the study and “soften the blow” for the millions who, for decades, have faithfully embraced a “contraceptive mental­ity.”

This mentality has promoted contraception, especially the Pill, as a path for women to move toward equality with men by enabling them to reap the “benefits” of the sexual revolution. 

But Mary Rice Hasson, J.D., director of the Catholic Women’s Forum at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C. notes that the reality for women is very different, and “our lived ex­perience has shown that this is a false promise.” Countless women, she emphasizes, have ended up being vulnerable to, and harmed by, the sexual revolution and its promotion of contraception as “the solution.” They have been given a “bitter pill” in the form of the Pill. 

In a remarkably prescient passage dating back to July, 1968, Pope Paul VI already foresaw this in his encyclical Humanae Vitae, the momentous and beautiful document explaining not only the moral problems with contracep­tion, but also its devastating ef­fects on men, families and women in particular.

Contraception, he writes, opens a wide and easy road “towards conjugal infidelity and the general lowering of morality. Not much experi­ence is needed in order to know human weakness, and to understand that men--es­pecially the young, who are so vulnerable on this point--have need of encouragement to be faithful to the moral law, so that they must not be offered some easy means of eluding its observance. It is also to be feared that the man, growing used to the em­ploy­ment of anti-conceptive prac­tices, may finally lose re­spect for the woman and, no longer car­ing for her physical and psy­chological equilibrium, may come to the point of con­sider­ing her as a mere instru­ment of selfish enjoyment, and no longer as his respected and beloved companion.”

Paul VI offers a profound, but unpopular, observation — that con­traception is harmful to women, and is, in fact, anti-woman. The widespread adoption of the “contraceptive men­tality” has led inexorably to a new perspective on women, namely, that they should be more like men, and therefore they should, like men, be­come impregnable, through the on­going practice of contraception. Very young women, sometimes just enter­ing puberty, are now placed onto regimens of hormonal contraception that can continue for years or even decades. From this perspective, their ability to conceive life becomes tan­tamount to a malady needing to be remedied, a “defect” that renders them “unequal” to men. Strikingly, though, ever greater numbers of women are discovering an authentic and liberating form of feminism as they come to the aware­ness that, in the words of Hasson, “we don’t have a design flaw. Being a woman is good… and it’s a wonder­ful thing.” 

Wonderful, too, is that confi­dent feminism and liberating sense of self-control that enables a woman to choose abstinence before marriage, rather than contraception, and, once married, to choose periodic absti­nence in agreement with her husband if their circumstances indicate they ought to avoid a pregnancy.

Hormonal contraceptives, meanwhile, throw a wrench into the works on a number of different lev­els. Beyond setting up a woman to be “used” by men, the Pill (and hor­mone-releasing IUD’s) cause signifi­cant alterations in her delicately-bal­anced physiology. These include re­stricting her ability to ovulate, altering her cycles and secretions, and modi­fying her uterine lining — in effect, forcing her body into a pseudo-preg­nant state to exclude the possibility of a real pregnancy. Whenever a woman takes these kinds of steps to disrupt her natural fertility, it should come as little surprise that her body rebels in one fashion or another, including possible weight gain, headaches, de­pression, and the heightened and well-documented risk of thrombotic stroke, myocardial infarction (heart attack), and — as confirmed by the recent study — breast cancer. A woman’s body doesn’t stand in need of being “fixed” by these powerful drugs that wreak havoc on her biol­ogy.

The Church’s ageless but coun­tercultural teaching on contraception respects and uplifts women. It sup­ports them in an authentic feminism that affirms their uniquely important maternal role in family and society, and esteems their fruitfulness in mar­riage not as a defect, but as a real gift.

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