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  Home arrow Birth Control arrow Research & Statistics arrow Study: Women Who Use Birth Control Pill 1.5 Times More Likely to Develop Bowel Disease (3/09, AJG)
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I heard that the abortion center in Pensacola has closed. I witnessed an abortion take place at a Pensacola abortion center.

I was with my confused girlfriend at the time, who I thought wasn’t going to go through with the abortion. I tried to talk her out of this horrible procedure, and I thought that in the end she would open her heart and her eyes to see that abortion was not the answer.

After all of this she still went through with the procedure, which I know she deeply regrets.

I know she wishes she hadn’t done this, because just a month or so later she was talking about trying to have another baby ["replacement baby"]…

I’m still praying for her, and for all the other men and women who are confused and think that abortion is the best solution.

It is not, it truly is not...

[From the 40 Days for Life National website, 7 Nov 09] 

 
Study: Women Who Use Birth Control Pill 1.5 Times More Likely to Develop Bowel Disease (3/09, AJG) PDF Print E-mail
A study on the role of oral contraceptives in the cause of inflammatory bowel disease, published in the American Journal of Gastroenterology, found that women who use the pill are one and a half times more likely to develop Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC) than women who have not used oral contraceptives.

The research by doctors at the Gastroenterology Unit of St. Mary's Hospital, Imperial College, and the Department of Surgery of St. Mark's Hospital, London, reported that a total of 75,815 patients were involved in the study of the etiology of UC and CD between 1983 and 2007. Of these women, 36,797 used the oral contraceptive pill (OCP) and 39,018 did not.

The report stated that the relative risk of developing Crohn's disease increased with a prolonged exposure to the OCP.

Whereas the overall average of increased risk was 1 1/2 times, the relative risk of developing CD for a woman who has used the pill for three years increases to almost 3.5 times.

This study has also shown that the risk associated with OCP exposure was reversed to that of the non-exposed population after stopping the use of the drug.

The adjustment of the results for smoking was an important aspect of this analysis, since it was found that smokers are more likely to take the OCP, and oral contraceptive users have been reported as more likely to smoke. The adjustments for smoking increased the relative risk of CD and decreased the risk of UC.


 

The study also suggested that a reduction in the estrogen and progesterone dosages in OCPs over the last two decades has not reduced the relative risk of inflammatory bowel disease in women who use the contraceptive pill.

An abstract of the study is available here: http://www.nature.com/ajg/journal/v103/n9/abs/ajg2008475a.ht...

Related:

Birth Control Pill May Cause Prostate Cancer and Bladder Disease in Mothers' Children
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2005/may/05050411.html

Birth Control Pill Raises Heart Attack Risk 100%
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2005/jul/05071207.html

Massive Study Finds the Pill Significantly Increases Cancer Risk if Used more than Eight Years
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2007/sep/07091306.html

Birth Control Pill Linked to Hardening of the Arteries
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/apr/08040807.html

 

[13March09,  T.M. Baklinski, LONDON, UK, www.LifeSiteNews.com]

 
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