Reducing uterine and ovarian mortality risks of religious sisters

The national Catholic bioethics quarterly, 12(2), 235-239

DOI 10.5840/ncbq201212250 Source

Abstract

Consecrated women religious have been shown to be at increased risk for uterine and ovarian cancers. The authors critique a proposal by Kara Britt and Roger Short advocating the distribution of a combined oral contraceptive to women religious as a way of reducing this risk. The authors argue that the proposal is seriously flawed: the data it references attenuate its conclusion, the execution protocol is incomplete, and the proposal fails to address the serious health risks of combined oral contraceptives. As a counterproposal, the authors recommend that women religious be taught to monitor their gynecologic health by charting their menstrual and ovulatory cycles. National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 12.2 (Summer 2012): 235–239.

Topics

women religious cancer risk, oral contraceptive cancer prevention critique, cycle charting gynecologic health monitoring, fertility awareness health surveillance, consecrated women ovarian cancer, menstrual cycle charting nuns, contraceptive health risks religious sisters, fertility awareness versus hormonal contraception, catholic bioethics reproductive health, cycle monitoring disease prevention

Cite this article

Hemphill, C. K., Karges, K. K., & Mirkes, R. (2012). Reducing Uterine and Ovarian Mortality Risks of Religious Sisters: A Critique and Counterproposal. *The national Catholic bioethics quarterly*, *12*(2), 235-239. https://doi.org/10.5840/ncbq201212250

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