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1.
Med Hist ; 64(2): 195-218, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32284634

ABSTRACT

The twentieth-century history of men and women's attempts to gain access to reproductive health services in the Republic of Ireland has been significantly shaped by Ireland's social and religious context. Although contraception was illegal in Ireland from 1935 to 1979, declining family sizes in this period suggest that many Irish men and women were practising fertility control measures. From the mid-1960s, the contraceptive pill was marketed in Ireland as a 'cycle regulator'. In order to obtain a prescription for the pill, Irish women would therefore complain to their doctors that they had heavy periods or irregular cycles. However, doing so could mean going against one's faith, and also depended on finding a sympathetic doctor. The contraceptive pill was heavily prescribed in Ireland during the 1960s and 1970s as it was the only contraceptive available legally, albeit prescribed through 'coded language'. The pill was critiqued by men and women on both sides of the debate over the legalisation of contraception. Anti-contraception activists argued that the contraceptive pill was an abortifacient, while both anti-contraception activists and feminist campaigners alike drew attention to its perceived health risks. As well as outlining these discussions, the paper also illustrates the importance of medical authority in the era prior to legalisation, and the significance of doctors' voices in relation to debates around the contraceptive pill. However, in spite of medical authority, it is clear that Irish women exercised significant agency in gaining access to the pill.


Subject(s)
Catholicism/history , Contraception/history , Contraceptives, Oral/history , Physician-Patient Relations , Religion and Medicine , Contraception/ethics , Family Planning Services/history , Family Planning Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , Feminism/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Ireland , Male , Physician's Role/history , Women's Rights/history
3.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 25(3): 725-742, 2018.
Article in English, Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30365733

ABSTRACT

The pharmacy world was a mandatory crossing point and active player in the establishment of hormonal contraception in Brazil. Through an analysis of articles published in A Gazeta da Farmácia from 1960 to 1981, the study explores little-known aspects of the birth control pill's biography and the construction of its Brazilian market. For pharmacy professionals, oral contraceptives were "opportunity pills" in two senses: they provided profits and they restored the prestige of these professionals within the scientific, clinical-therapeutic, and political realms. The pathways of the pill and the pharmacy world intersected as both wove their biographies under the patronage of industry. Pharmacists and the pill were co-constructed, and each was an important crossing point for the other.


O artigo analisa matérias sobre pílulas anticoncepcionais publicadas em A Gazeta da Farmácia, entre 1960 e 1980, examinando aspectos pouco conhecidos da biografia desses medicamentos e da constituição do seu mercado. Para os profissionais de farmácia, os anticoncepcionais orais se apresentaram como "as pílulas da oportunidade", seja no sentido dos lucros, seja no sentido de resgatar seu prestígio no campo científico, clínico-terapêutico e político. As trajetórias das pílulas anticoncepcionais e do mundo da farmácia se interseccionaram, quando ambos buscavam tecer sua biografia, apadrinhados pela indústria. Farmacêuticos e pílulas se coconstituíram, um sendo importante ponto de passagem para outro.


Subject(s)
Contraceptives, Oral/history , Periodicals as Topic/history , Pharmaceutical Services/history , Brazil , Commerce , Gonadal Steroid Hormones , History of Pharmacy , History, 20th Century , Pharmacists , Professional Role , Sociological Factors
4.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 25(3): 725-742, jul.-set. 2018.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-975423

ABSTRACT

Resumo O artigo analisa matérias sobre pílulas anticoncepcionais publicadas em A Gazeta da Farmácia, entre 1960 e 1980, examinando aspectos pouco conhecidos da biografia desses medicamentos e da constituição do seu mercado. Para os profissionais de farmácia, os anticoncepcionais orais se apresentaram como "as pílulas da oportunidade", seja no sentido dos lucros, seja no sentido de resgatar seu prestígio no campo científico, clínico-terapêutico e político. As trajetórias das pílulas anticoncepcionais e do mundo da farmácia se interseccionaram, quando ambos buscavam tecer sua biografia, apadrinhados pela indústria. Farmacêuticos e pílulas se coconstituíram, um sendo importante ponto de passagem para outro.


Abstract The pharmacy world was a mandatory crossing point and active player in the establishment of hormonal contraception in Brazil. Through an analysis of articles published in A Gazeta da Farmácia from 1960 to 1981, the study explores little-known aspects of the birth control pill's biography and the construction of its Brazilian market. For pharmacy professionals, oral contraceptives were "opportunity pills" in two senses: they provided profits and they restored the prestige of these professionals within the scientific, clinical-therapeutic, and political realms. The pathways of the pill and the pharmacy world intersected as both wove their biographies under the patronage of industry. Pharmacists and the pill were co-constructed, and each was an important crossing point for the other.


Subject(s)
History, 20th Century , Periodicals as Topic/history , Pharmaceutical Services/history , Contraceptives, Oral/history , Pharmacists , Gonadal Steroid Hormones , Brazil , Commerce , Professional Role , Sociological Factors , History of Pharmacy
5.
Cult Health Sex ; 20(7): 830-843, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29043903

ABSTRACT

The birth control pill is one of the most popular forms of contraception in North America and has been a key player in women's rights activism for over 50 years. In this paper, I conduct a feminist deconstructive analysis of 12 biomedical texts on the birth control pill, published between 1965 and 2016. This study is situated amongst the feminist scholarship that challenges the representation of women's bodies in biomedicine. Findings suggest that clinical texts on the birth control pill continue to universalise women's lives and experiences, and essentialise them based on their reproductive capacities. One way the texts accomplish this is by making women absent or passive in the literature thereby losing concern for the diversity of their lives, interpretations and identities as more than reproductive beings. The consequence of such representations is that biomedical texts disseminate limited forms of knowledge, in particular concerning definitions of 'natural' and 'normal' behaviour, with important consequences for the embodied experiences of women.


Subject(s)
Contraceptives, Oral/history , Feminism , Women's Health , Adult , Contraception , Female , Fertility , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Textbooks as Topic , Women's Rights , Young Adult
7.
10.
Contraception ; 94(4): 295-302, 2016 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27343747

ABSTRACT

The introduction of the birth control pill (the Pill) in 1960 revolutionized the options for contraception, sparking vibrant discussion in the scientific and social science literature and in the media. Much attention focused on issues of women's rights, including ethics and personal choice. But the Pill also introduced new questions about risk. Shortly after its introduction, the risk of thromboembolic disease was recognized [1]. After more than half a century, controversies about the relationship between the Pill and thromboembolic disease have persisted. The scientific and media communities have been active in the discussion, debate and delivery of information about this risk. Scientific and public attention to thromboembolism and the Pill has had dramatic consequences, both good and bad. The spotlight on risk has helped to change norms regarding the public's right to know and assess dangers; it has sparked Pill scares linked to increased unplanned pregnancy, birth and abortion rates; and it has led to a change in federally mandated policies regarding how new contraceptive products are studied and brought to market. This paper charts the narrative of the thromboembolic risk of the Pill from its introduction in 1960 until today and reviews the corresponding media response to this history. How does the story of the thromboembolic risk of the Pill - explored through the lens of science, media and contemporary social dynamics - frame contemporary understanding of risk for researchers, clinicians, individuals and the public?


Subject(s)
Contraception/adverse effects , Contraception/history , Contraceptives, Oral/adverse effects , Contraceptives, Oral/history , Mass Media/history , Thromboembolism/chemically induced , Thromboembolism/history , Biomedical Research , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Risk Assessment , Women's Health , Women's Rights
14.
Lancet ; 385(9968): 600, 2015 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25713857
16.
Public Underst Sci ; 24(6): 658-71, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24259515

ABSTRACT

From 1941 to 1978, Franco's regime in Spain banned all contraceptive methods. The pill started circulating in Spain from the 1960s, officially as a drug used in gynaecological therapy. However, in the following decade it was also increasingly used and prescribed as a contraceptive. This paper analyses debates about the contraceptive pill in the Spanish daily newspaper ABC and in two magazines, Blanco y Negro and Triunfo, in the 1960s and 1970s. It concludes that the debate on this contraceptive method was much more heterogeneous than might be expected given the Catholic-conservative character of the dictatorship. The daily press focused on the adverse effects of the drug and magazines concentrated on the ethical and religious aspects of the pill and discussed it in a generally positive light. Male doctors and Catholic authors dominated the debate.


Subject(s)
Contraception/history , Contraceptives, Oral/history , Politics , Contraception/psychology , Contraceptives, Oral/supply & distribution , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Labor, Obstetric , Newspapers as Topic , Physicians , Pregnancy , Religion , Spain , Women
18.
Fam Community Health ; 37(3): 199-211, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24892860

ABSTRACT

In 1965, Nancy Milio established a prenatal and family planning clinic in Detroit, Michigan, to address health disparities and limited access to care among low-income, African American, urban women. Women's health disparities persist today nationally and internationally. Using historical methods, this research analyzes how Milio provided women's health services in the context of the social and political environment. Milio empowered neighborhood women to direct, plan, and participate in the care they received. Successful methods to address disparities in access to family and planning and prenatal care should include empowered participation from the women these programs are intending to serve.


Subject(s)
Family Planning Services/history , Healthcare Disparities , Public Health Nursing/methods , Reproductive Rights , Residence Characteristics , Adolescent , Adult , Black or African American , Child , Child, Preschool , Contraceptives, Oral/history , Female , Health Education , Health Promotion/methods , Healthcare Disparities/ethnology , Healthcare Disparities/standards , History, 20th Century , Humans , Maternal-Child Health Centers/organization & administration , Michigan , Poverty Areas , Pregnancy , Prenatal Care/history , Reproductive Rights/history , Social Conditions , Urban Health Services , Urban Population , Women's Health Services/history , Young Adult
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