Natural family planning methods

  • St Vincent's HospitalMelbourne

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 143(1), 114-115

Source

Abstract

Wade et al.'s report, entitled "A randomized prospective study of the use-effectiveness of 2 methods of natural family planning," contains items worthy of emphasis. These includes the following: 1) less than 5% of the women in the study were prevented from using the method assigned them because of problems in identifying their cervical mucus pattern; 2) those who were unable or unwilling to adhere to the methodology were encouraged to drop out; 3) the largest single category of pregnancies occurred in both groups when the volunteers failed to follow the rules for avoiding pregnancy; 4) it was judged that there were 6 pregnancies in the ovulation method group to be classified as method failures, apparently for a total of 4501 cycles, which gives a method-failure rate of 1.6%; 5) couples were required to sign an informed consent statement of their awareness that the chances of the occurrence of pregnancy could be as high as 25% for the ovulation method; 6) recruiting difficulties constituted an important finding, primarily because they were unexpected by the investigators; 7) the volunteers recruited into the trial were restricted to those women whose menstrual cycles were 24-36 days; 8) the couples who failed to continue with the use of these 2 natural methods--ovulation and temperature rhythm--were on the average younger, more sexually active, and had fewer children; and 9) the ovulation method brings the partners into confrontation with their fertility in each cycle, and this has marked psychological results, including an awakening of the suppressed desire for that fertility to become creative of human life.

Topics

Billings ovulation method use effectiveness natural family planning, cervical mucus pattern identification method failure rate, ovulation method vs temperature rhythm randomized study, natural family planning method failure 1.6 percent, Billings JJ natural family planning methods review, informed consent natural family planning pregnancy risk, fertility awareness psychological effects couples, natural family planning recruitment difficulties study design, ovulation method rules adherence pregnancy outcomes, Wade randomized prospective natural family planning study

Cite this article

Billings, J. J. (1982). Natural family planning methods. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *143*(1), 114-115.

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