Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/43610
Title: The problematic pill
Authors: Elder, M. G.
Keywords: Oral contraceptives -- Physiological effect
Oral contraceptives -- Side effects
Contraceptive drugs
Estrogen -- Physiological effect
Progestational hormones
Issue Date: 1971
Publisher: Malta Medical Students Association
Citation: Elder, M. G. (1971). The problematic pill. Chest-piece, 3(3), 5-9.
Abstract: The first oestrogen containing oral contraceptive was introduced in 1957 as a clinical trial involving a few hundred Puerto Rican women; it was first sold on the open market in 1960, and it is now taken by over 14 million women throughout the world. There are two types of oestrogen containing oral contraceptive, a corn bined preparation in which both oestrogen and progestogen are present in all 20 to 22 tablets, or a sequential preparation in which all the tablets contain an oestrogen, but only the last 5 to 7 contain a progestogen. Recently a pill containing a progestogen alone has been introduced, but as it is not very effective as a contraceptive its use is limited, and there has been as yet little research work carried out on its metabolic effects. Only the first two types, that is those containing an oestrogen, will be considered.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/43610
Appears in Collections:Chest-piece, volume 3, issue 3
Chest-piece, volume 3, issue 3

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