Apply the Precautionary Principle Concerning Combined Hormonal Contraception Use in Adolescents

Women's Reproductive Health, 3(2), 113-116

DOI 10.1080/23293691.2016.1196086 Source

Abstract

Here I respond to Akers, Dhar, and Shah's (2016), Stubbs's (2016), Olshansky's (2016), and Kissling's (2016) commentaries on the article (Prior, 2016) in which I expressed concerns about the potential adverse long-term reproductive and bone health effects on normal adolescents’ maturation related to use of combined hormonal contraceptives (CHC) for contraception and/or treatment. Although Akers et al. (2016) take exception, the precautionary principle on which medical/pharmaceutical ethics is based challenges us to show that CHC is officially indicated and effective in randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials with adolescents. Those who support current practices are obligated to provide young patients and their parents with evidence from large, population-based, prospective studies (or meta-analyses of longitudinal data) that adolescents who have used CHC develop the same menstrual cycle/ovulatory function, fertility, and reproductive lifespan and similar bone density and strength as peers who did not use CHC. Without this information there can be neither reproductive justice (Kissing, 2016), nor true choice. Why is this minimal, expected scientific data not available? It is likely that authors of practice guidelines for adolescent CHC contraceptive use and who advocate its “non-contraceptive benefits” have pro-estrogen cultural biases or conflicts of interests due to pharmaceutical industry connections. I agree with Olshansky (2016) that we should listen to adolescents’ concerns and use evidence-based and safe treatments for milder heavy bleeding and cramps. For heterosexual adolescents seeking contraception, we can suggest and explain the use of safer, yet effective, nonhormonal strategies, such as the copper IUD or a barrier plus full-dose vaginal spermicide.

Topics

hormonal contraception adolescents safety, combined hormonal contraceptives bone health, precautionary principle birth control, long-term effects birth control pills teenagers, nonhormonal contraception adolescents, reproductive health risks hormonal contraceptives, copper iud teens, fertility after teenage birth control use, informed consent adolescent contraception, ovulatory function after pill use, bone density hormonal contraceptives, pharmaceutical industry conflicts of interest

Cite this article

Prior, J. C. (1900). Apply the Precautionary Principle Concerning Combined Hormonal Contraception Use in Adolescents. *Men's reproductive health*, *3*(2), 113-116. https://doi.org/10.1080/23293691.2016.1196086

Related articles