Home
Ads/Locums
An Introduction
Conferences
Contact info
Discussion
History of
Logo
Links
Media/Press
New
Our CEO
Photos
Presentations
Shop
|
|
Statement on the mode of action of the
Morning After Pill (MAP) The action of
the MAP has been extensively studied and is found in most standard obstetric and
gynaecology books, as well as embryology books. The following quote summaries the
information:
The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology,
6th Edition,
by Moore and Persaud (P. 532):
Postcoital birth control pills
. Ovarian
hormones (estrogen) taken in large doses within 72
hours after sexual intercourse usually prevent implantation of the blastocyst,
probably by
altering tubal motility, interfering with corpus luteum function, or causing
abnormal changes
in the endometrium. These hormones prevent implantation, not fertilization.
Consequently, they should not be called contraceptive pills. Conception occurs but
the
blastocyst does not implant. It would be more appropriate to call
them "contraimplantation
pills." Because the term abortion refers to a premature stoppage of a
pregnancy, the term
abortion could be applied to such an early termination of pregnancy.
Research has shown that, in a laboratory setting, sperm can
migrate into the Fallopian tube, the site
of fertilization, within five minutes of intercourse.(1) Thus, the use of
any form of emergency birth
control the next morning would be many hours too late for any purported
anti-sperm activity.(2)
Research that is more recent has
demonstrated that, under the influence of uterine contractions, rapid
transport of sperm-sized spheres to the Fallopian tube can take only one minute.(3)
Once the sperms have reached the site of fertilisation, all
that remains, is for the oocyte to be present.
If conception is going to occur, it will, irrespective of any hormonal
manipulation. Oocytes are usually
fertilised within 12 hours of ovulation, and are viable for about 24 hours of
ovulation. For fertilisation to
occur, ovulation has usually occurred prior to intercourse, but can occur after
intercourse.
Thus the action of the MAP is normally to prevent
implantation rather than to prevent fertilisation, and
therefore, by definition, the MAP is not a contraceptive but an abortifacient.
|