"In the 1960s, manufacturers of the new birth-control pill imagined their ideal user as feminine, maternal and forgetful. She wanted discretion. She was married. And she wanted visible proof that her monthly cycle was normal and that she wasn’t pregnant. In 2019, the user of the pill is perceived as an altogether different person. She’s unwed, probably would prefer to skip her period and is more forthright about when it’s that time of the month. As such, many birth-control brands now come in brightly colored rectangular packs that make no effort to be concealed. But one part of the equation remains: the week of placebo pills, in which hormones are abruptly withdrawn and a woman experiences what looks and feels a lot like her regular period — blood, cramps and all — but isn’t. Physicians have widely described this pseudoperiod as medically unnecessary. So why do millions still endure it? That’s largely the legacy of two men: John Rock and David Wagner."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Rachel E. Gross, “Why Women on the Pill Still ‘Need’ to Have Their Periods“, ‘’New York Times’’, (Dec. 11, 2019).
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Hormonal_birth_control
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Hormonal birth control
102 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Hormonal birth control →
Related Quotes
"The chemical history of the pill begins with the isolation of progesterone in May 1933 by Corner and Allen. With the …"
"I invented the pill at the request of a woman."
"In January 1970 experts assembled in the stately Senate chamber and began giving their testimony on the hazards of th…"
"The introduction of oral contraception in 1960 was not the result of one person's fortuitous discovery as happened wi…"
"The early production of progesterone was extremely complex and laborious and the resulting product prohibitively expe…"
"It had already been known for several decades that sex hormones were able to suppress ovulation in animals. Ludwig Ha…"
"Almost every decade we have witnessed a breakthrough in oral contraception. Social and moral objections to birth cont…"
"When the Pill came on the market in 1960, it was enthusiastically embraced by the medical profession and the public. …"
"With the arrival of the birth control pill in 1960, many believed the Church was about to change the position it had …"
"Historically, contraception was believed to affect the voice negatively. However, more recent studies using low-dose …"