Natural family planning

  • University of Melbourne ROR
  • Health Sciences and Nutrition ROR
  • Université Laval ROR
  • Department of Pathology, Southern Regional Area Health Education Center, Fayetteville, North Carolina, USA. ROR

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 157(4 Pt 2), 1082-1089

DOI 10.1016/s0002-9378(87)80137-0 PMID 3314524

Abstract

It is now well accepted that a woman can conceive from an act of intercourse for a maximum of only about 7 days of her menstrual cycle. The reliability of natural family planning depends on identifying this window of fertility without ambiguity. Several symptomatic markers, cervical mucus and basal body temperature, have been used extensively and with considerable success in most women but failures occur. Ovarian and pituitary hormone production show characteristic patterns during the cycle. Urinary estrogen and pregnanediol measurements yield reliable information concerning the beginning, peak, and end of the fertile period, provided that the assays are accurate and performed on timed specimens of urine. We have developed such enzyme immunoassays for urinary estrogen and pregnanediol glucuronides that can be performed at home. In the early versions of the assays, enzyme reaction rates were measured by eye, but more recently, a simple photoelectronic rate meter has been used. The final problem to be solved is not technologic but whether women are sufficiently motivated to expend the same time and effort each day for 10 days a month, with less cost, on fertility awareness as they spend on making a cup of tea.

Topics

natural family planning urinary hormone monitoring, Brown JB urinary estrogen pregnanediol fertility awareness, enzyme immunoassay home fertility testing estrogen glucuronide, Billings method cervical mucus hormone confirmation, fertile window identification urinary hormone assay, pregnanediol glucuronide home monitoring ovulation, natural family planning reliability hormone measurement, basal body temperature cervical mucus hormone correlation, ovarian hormone patterns menstrual cycle fertility, urinary estrogen assay fertile period identification, home-based hormone monitoring natural family planning, pituitary ovarian hormone cycle fertility awareness method
PMID 3314524 3314524 DOI 10.1016/s0002-9378(87)80137-0 10.1016/s0002-9378(87)80137-0

Cite this article

Brown, J. B., Blackwell, L. F., Billings, J. J., Conway, B., Cox, R. I., Garrett, G., Holmes, J., & Smith, M. A. (1987). Natural family planning. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *157*(4 Pt 2), 1082-1089. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9378(87)80137-0

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