Nigel Hawkes, Health Editor
Posted on 09/12/2007 6:38:01 PM PDT by neverdem
Pill plus HRT may bring cancer risk | Decade of Pill use doubles risk of cervical cancer
Taking the Pill reduces the risks of a woman getting cancer later in life, according to one of the largest studies ever undertaken.
The conclusion will reassure millions of women who took the Pill 30 or 40 years ago and are now of an age when the risks are growing.
The study found that overall cancer risk was up to 12 per cent lower for women who took the Pill for less than eight years. But, for the minority of women who took it for more than eight years, the news was less good: for them, the risk of cancer increased by 22 per cent.
The risk of developing bowel and rectal, uterine and ovarian cancers was most reduced. There was no evidence that the risk of developing breast cancer either increased or decreased with short-term usage.
“Many women, especially those who used the first generation of oral contraceptives many years ago, are likely to be reassured by our results,” the authors of the new study say. “The cancer benefits of oral contraception outweigh the risks.”
Maria Leadbeater, of Breast Cancer Care, said: “The findings of this research will be welcomed by the thousands of women across the UK who have used, or are currently using, an oral contraceptive.”
The team, from the University of Aberdeen, used data gathered by the Royal College of Physicians since 1968, which asked 1,400 GPs to provide information on women who were taking the Pill, and a matched group who were not. A total of 46,000 women were recruited, aged 29 on average. All were married or in a stable relationship.
The women were then monitored until 2004, and any cancers they developed were recorded.
The team also had more limited data up to 1996 provided by the women’s GPs, giving them two sets of statistics from which to work.
The results, reported in the British Medical Journal, show that the Pill reduced the overall risks of cancer for most women, though the degree of benefit depended on which dataset was used.
Using the main dataset, the team found a reduction of 12 per cent in the risk of getting any cancer. That represents one fewer case of cancer for every 2,200 women who have used the Pill for a year.
The smaller dataset also showed a benefit, but a smaller one: a 3 per cent reduction in overall risk, equivalent to one fewer case for every 10,000 women per year.
The exception was for women who used the Pill for more than eight years – about a quarter of Pill-users. Their risk of cancer was significantly increased. The average Pill user in the research took the contraceptive for 44 months.
Professor Philip Hannaford, who led the research team, said: “These results show that, in this UK cohort, the contraceptive Pill was not associated with an overall increased risk of any cancer; indeed it may produce an important net public health gain.”
About three million women use the Pill each year in Britain and 100 million around the world. More than 300 million women have used the Pill since its launch in 1961.
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2399 The regulation of births represents one of the aspects of responsible fatherhood and motherhood. Legitimate intentions on the part of the spouses do not justify recourse to morally unacceptable means (for example, direct sterilization or contraception). |
2370 Periodic continence, that is, the methods of birth regulation based on self-observation and the use of infertile periods, is in conformity with the objective criteria of morality. These methods respect the bodies of the spouses, encourage tenderness between them, and favor the education of an authentic freedom. In contrast, "every action which, whether in anticipation of the conjugal act, or in its accomplishment, or in the development of its natural consequences, proposes, whether as an end or as a means, to render procreation impossible" is intrinsically evil:
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I’m for rampant procreation myself.
Because the results of this study run counter to most of the other which say the opposite.
If it’s rampant procreation of conservative patriots, I’m all for it.
;-)
;o)
You are confusing the "day after pill" with the standard oral contraceptive "pill". There is no fetus with standard oral contraceptives because no egg pops out to be fertilized.
The ignorance demonstrated on this thread is astounding. I thought most pro-life folks (myself included), exception to Catholics of course, were comfortable with contraception that prevents conception (i.e. a zygote).
Why are people ragging on the pill? Is this the Freerepublic or the flatearth society?
There is no fetus with standard oral contraceptives because no egg pops out to be fertilized.
I was going to give you a pass until you got rude.
The Pill works in a couple of ways. One way is to prevent ovulation. The second way is to change the lining of the uterus so that a fertilized egg cannot implant, IN CASE the Pill did NOT prevent ovulation.
Once again you are confusing the day after pill with standard oral contraceptives. Ovolation is surpressed ergo no fertilization. Hypothetically, if ovulation was not surpressed your aborticant scenario may be true. But it is rare and little more than a weak rationalization against OC.
As this thread demonstrates there is no shortage of exaggeration and misinformation regarding the pill.
I've confused exactly nothing. Ovulation is NOT ALWAYS surpressed, although, I agree it is a main goal.
How common this failure is, I have no idea. I did, however, experience it personally, for about 6 months on one particular pill.
I suspect it is more common than you wish to believe.
bttt
Pregnancy is possible even with the pill. It’s in the warning that comes with the package.
I wonder what child-bearing does to the risk of cancer later in life?
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