Delay in conception for former 'pill' users

JAMA, 247(5), 629-632

PMID 6976442 Source

Abstract

Interview data from 3,214 married women having planned pregnancies and singleton deliveries who had no history of fertility treatment and who conceived more than two weeks after cessation of contraception were analyzed. The interval from cessation of contraception to conception was 13 months or greater for 24.8% of prior "pill" users vs 10.6% for former users of all other methods. As compared with former users of other methods, pill users had a notably lower monthly percentage of conceptions for the first three months and somewhat lower percentage from four to ten months. Results were not altered when potential confounding variables were controlled by logistic regression. At least 15 months of unsuccessful trials might be a more appropriate working definition of infertility for previous pill users rather than the 12-month interval generally accepted for this purpose.

Topics

delayed fertility after birth control pills, return to fertility after oral contraceptives, post-pill amenorrhea conception delay, how long to conceive after stopping the pill, oral contraceptive discontinuation infertility, pill users time to pregnancy, contraceptive method comparison fertility outcomes, secondary infertility after hormonal contraception, cross-sectional study contraceptive effects, 12 month infertility definition former pill users, hormonal contraception long-term effects fertility

Cite this article

Linn, S., Schoenbaum, S. C., Monson, R. R., Rosner, B., & Ryan, K. J. (1982). Delay in conception for former 'pill' users. *JAMA*, *247*(5), 629-632.

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