In Our Control (55 page)

Read In Our Control Online

Authors: Laura Eldridge

BOOK: In Our Control
4.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
  
98.
Ray Moynihan, “FDA Panel Rejects Testosterone Patch for Women on Safety Grounds,”
British Medical Journal
329 (December 11, 2004): 1363.
  
99.
Schaffir, “Hormonal Contraception and Sexual Desire: A Critical Review,” 305–14.
100.
Mary A. Ott, Marcia L. Shew, Susan Ofner, “The Influence of Hormonal Contraception on Mood and Sexual Interest among Adolescents,”
Archives of Sexual Behavior
37 (2008): 605–13.
101.
Schaffir, “Hormonal Contraception and Sexual Desire: A Critical Review,” 305–14.
102.
C. A. Graham, R. Ramos, and J. Bancroft, et al., “The effects of steroidal contraceptives on the well-being and sexuality of women: A double-blinded, placebo-controlled, two-centre study of combined and progestogen-only methods,”
Contraception
53 (1995): 363–69.
103.
Raphaelle Chaix, Chen Cao, and Peter Donnelly, “Is Mate Choice in Humans MHC-Dependent?,”
PLOS Genetics
4, no. 9 (September 8, 2008): e1000184, doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1000184.
104.
Melinda Wenner, “Birth Control Pills Affect Women’s Taste in Men,”
Scientific American
, December 5, 2008.
105.
Alexandra Alvergne and Virpi Lummaa, “Does the Contraceptive Pill Alter Mate Choice in Humans?”
Trends in Ecology and Evolution
, October 6, 2009.
106.
“The pill ‘gives women a taste for boyish men like Zac Efron,’ ”
Daily Telegraph
, October 8, 2009.
107.
Ibid.
108.
M. F. Gallo, L. M. Lopez, and D. A. Grimes, et. al., “Combination contraceptives: effects on weight,”
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
2 (2009).
109.
Salynn Boyles, “The Pill Won’t Add Extra Pounds, Study Shows,” January 24, 2006, WebMD Health News,
http://www.webmd.com/sex/birth-control/news/20060124/pill-wont-add-pounds-study-shows
.
110.
Anahad O’Connor, “The Claim: The Pill Can Make You Put On Weight,”
New York Times
, January 27, 2007.
111.
M. Lofthouse, “Depot medroxyprogesterone acetate for contraception causes weight and fat gain in women,”
Nature, Clinical Practice and Metabolism
1, no. 2 (2005): 69
112.
L. M. Lopez, D. A. Grimes, and K. F. Schulz, “Steroidal contraceptives: effect on carbohydrate metabolism in women without diabetes mellitus (Review),”
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
2 (2009).
113.
James Trussell, Eleanor Bimla Schwarz, and Katherine Guthrie, “Obesity and oral contraceptive failure,”
Contraception
79 (2009): 334–38.
114.
Bennett,
The Pill: Are You Sure It’s For You?
, 56.
115.
“Oral Contraceptives Impair Muscle Gains in Young Women,” American Physiological Society, April 17, 2009,
http://www.the-asp.org/press/releases/09/16.htm
.
116.
D’Souza, “Risks and benefits of oral contraceptive pills,” 146–47.
117.
“Taking Birth Control Pills May Place Diabetic Women at Risk for Kidney Disease,” American Diabetes Association,
http://www.diabetes.org
.
118.
S. B. Ahmed et al., “Oral Contraceptives, angiotensin-dependent renal vasoconstriction, and the risk of diabetic nephropathy,”
Diabetes Care
28 (2005): 1988–94.
119.
World Health Organization (WHO),
Improving access to quality care in family planning: Medical eligibility criteria for contraceptive use
(Geneva: WHO, 2001).
120.
Jerilynn C. Prior and Christine L. Hitchcock, “Manipulating Menstruation with Hormonal Contraception—what does the Science say?” CeMCOR,
http://www.cemcor.ubc.ca
; J. C. Prior, S. Kirkland, L. Joseph, et al., “Oral contraceptive agent use and bone mineral density in premenopausal women: cross-sectional, population-based data from the Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study,”
Canadian Medical Association Journal 1
65 (2001): 1023–29.
121.
Franco Polatti, Francesca Perotti, and Nadia Filippa, et al., “Bone Mass and Long-Term Monophasic Oral Contraceptive Treatment in Young Women,”
Contraception
51 (1995): 221–24.
122.
C. Cooper, P. Hannaford, and P. Croft, et al., “Oral contraceptive pill use and fractures in women: A prospective study,”
Bone
14 (1993): 41–45; M. Vessey, J. Mant, R. Painter, “Oral contraception and other factors in relation to hospital referral for fracture—findings in a large cohort study,”
Contraception
57 (1998): 231–35.
123.
Ibid.
124.
Victoria, interview with author, July 2009.
125.
Susan Rako,
No More Periods?
(New York: Harmony Books, 2003), 45–54.
126.
D’Souza, “Risks and benefits of oral contraceptive pills,” 135–36.
127.
Jerilynn Prior,
Estrogen’s Storm Season
(Vancouver, BC: Centre for Menstrual Cycle and Ovulation Research, 2005).
128.
Dickey,
Managing Contraceptive Pill Patients
, 158; M. J. Rosenberg, and M. S. Waugh, “Oral contraceptive discontinuation: A prospective evaluation of frequency and reasons,” American
Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology
179 (1998): 577–82.
129.
M. F. Gallo, K. Nauda, D. A. Grimes, K. F. Schulz, “20 mcg versus > 20 mcg estrogen combined oral contraceptives for contraception,”
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
2 (2005).
130.
Dickey,
Managing Contraceptive Pill Patients
, 160.
131.
M. J. Rosenberg, M. S. Waugh, and C. M. Stevens, “Smoking and cycle control among oral contraceptive users,”
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
174 (1996): 628–32.
132.
Jerilynn C. Prior, “Choices for Effective Contraception in 2006,” The Center for Menstrual Cycle and Ovulation Research,
http://www.cemcor.ubc.ca/print/110
.
133.
Ibid.
134.
Ibid.
135.
J. Guillebaud, “Combined oral contraception,” in
Handbook for Family Planning
, A. Glasier and A. Gebbie, eds. (London: Churchill Livingstone, 2000).
136.
Kurt T. Barnhart, Courtney A. Schreiber, “Return to fertility following discontinuation of oral contraceptives,”
Fertility and Sterility
91, no. 3 (March 2009): 659–63.
137.
D’Souza, “Risks and benefits of oral contraceptive pills,” 135–36.
138.
μ. A. M. Hassan and S. R. Killick, “Is previous use of hormonal contraception associated with a detrimental effect on subsequent fecundity?”
Human Reproduction
19, no. 2 (2004): 344.
139.
Dickey,
Managing Contraceptive Pill Patients
, 44.
140.
Pope and Bennett,
The Pill: Are You Sure It’s For You?
, 99–100.
141.
Holly Grigg-Spall, conversation with author, March 31, 2010.
142.
Pope and Bennett,
The Pill
, 99.
143.
Ibid.

Chapter Three: Hidden in Plain Sight

    
1.
Robert Jütte,
Contraception: A History
(Cambridge, UK, and Malden, MA: Polity Press, 2008), 134.
    
2.
Quoted in Andrea Tone,
Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America
(New York: Hill and Wang, 2001), 57.
    
3.
Ibid., 117.
    
4.
William D. Mosher, et al., “Use of Contraception and Use of Family Planning Services in the United States: 1982–2002,” Advance Data from Vital and Health Statistics, no. 350, December 10, 2004,
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/ad/ad350.pdf
.
    
5.
“IUDs: Not Scary After All?” October 18, 2005,
www.feministing.com
.
    
6.
Nancy S. Padian et al., “Diaphragm and Lubricant Gel for Prevention of HIV Acquisition in Southern African Women: A Randomised Controlled Trial,”
Lancet
370, no. 9583 (July 21, 2007): 251–61.
    
7.
“Facts on Contraceptive Use,” Guttmacher Institute, January 2008,
www.guttmacher.org/pubs/fb_contr_use.html
.
    
8.
Quoted in David Crary, “Health Advocates Tout New Model of Female Condom,”
TriCity Herald
, April 16, 2009.
    
9.
Ibid.
  
10.
Ibid.
  
11.
Jütte,
Contraception
, 121.
  
12.
William Parker with Rachel L. Parker,
A Gynecologist’s Second Opinion
(New York: Plume, 2003), 45.
  
13.
Tone,
Devices and Desires
, 61.
  
14.
Jütte,
Contraception
, 155.
  
15.
Tone,
Devices and Desires
, 263.
  
16.
Jütte,
Contraception,”
207.
  
17.
Tone,
Devices and Desires
, 264.
  
18.
Ibid.
  
19.
Ibid., 265, 266.
  
20.
Private conversation with the author.
  
21.
Tone,
Devices and Desires
, 269.
  
22.
Susan Wood, speech delivered to Law Students for Reproductive Justice (American University School of Law, Washington, DC, February 8, 2009).

Other books

Turn Coat by Jim Butcher
Veil of Lies by Jeri Westerson
If the Shoe Fits by Amber T. Smith
Dead Man on the Moon by Steven Harper
The Mechanic by Trinity Marlow
Fighting Redemption by Kate McCarthy
Enslave by Felicity Heaton
Christmas Belles by Carroll, Susan