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Your Contraceptives Can Affect Your Mental Health

By HERWriter
 
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Best Birth control for anxiety and the best birth control for depression? via pexels

With the affordability of contraceptives for many women under the Affordable Care Act, it might be tempting to rush in to the doctor to get a prescription.

But first it’s important to know how different contraceptives can affect not only your overall physical health, but also your mental health.

Contraceptives come in many forms, such as the birth control pill and IUD, so each type could potentially have varying side effects depending on the individual. Experts provide some benefits and downfalls of contraceptives in regard to mental health.

Dr. Wendie Trubow, a board certified gynecologist and quality director at Visions HealthCare, said in an email that birth control pills especially can have the ability to affect mental health.

“Any contraceptive that contains hormones has the potential to [impact] a woman's mental health due to the effect synthetic hormones can have on a woman's body,” Trubow said. “For any woman who is prone to depression, anxiety, sadness, or [mood] swings, the hormone-containing contraceptives can magnify those responses.”

“The mechanism is complicated, and involves the woman's innate state of health, her overall toxic burden, and the way her liver processes and her gut excretes the hormones she has taken,” she added.

“Additionally, oral contraceptives inhibit ovulation, which can blunt a woman's sexual drive. This can be distressing for many women and their partners, who don't understand why their sex drive is suddenly diminished.”

For women who are already experiencing mental health problems before taking contraceptives, it can be a gamble to starting taking pills with hormones.

“Any woman who has a history of depression, anxiety, panic disorders, mood swings or seasonal affective disorder should consider how well she manages her mental health prior to beginning a hormone-containing contraceptive, because for a subset of women, taking this type of contraceptive can worsen an underlying mental health issue,” Trubow said.

For women who experience negative side effects from birth control pills that contain hormones, there are other contraceptive alternatives, such as the intrauterine device (IUD), which can be found with or without hormones.

Trubow considers the IUD to be a highly effective method. Other options include diaphragms, condoms and tubal ligation. For women who do decide on contraceptives with hormones, there are ways to eliminate other potential negative side effects.

“It is very important to optimize the function of her liver and intestines by avoiding processed foods, detoxifying the diet and taking supplements that improve the liver's function,” Trubow said.

Dr. Ingrid Rodi, an associate clinical professor of OBGYN at the Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, said in an email that birth control pills have some beneficial effects for women.

“Women are very anxious not to have an unplanned/unwanted pregnancy,” Rodi said. “Contraceptives allow women control over their reproductive lives.”

There are also more intense symptoms that birth control can help with.

“Some women have PMS -- anxiety/depression/irritability just prior to the menstrual period,” Rodi said. “Hormonal contraceptives, particularly when taken continuously, can reduce the severity of the symptoms.”

Additionally, more control over their own bodies is always beneficial for women.

“Affordability of contraception will have a positive [effect] on mental health because more women will have more control over when they get pregnant,” Rodi said.

“Particularly women with mental health issues need to carefully plan pregnancies to optimize the outcome for them and the babies. Access to contraception will help that.”

Researchers at Harvard Medical School conducted a study to determine if oral contraceptives impact mood.

They found that for most women there are no mood changes after going on the pill. However, a smaller percentage of women (16.3 percent) out of the overall sample of 658 participants, experienced a worsening of their moods.

In addition, there are women with personal accounts of negative experiences with birth control. Lauren Vork shared on Yahoo! Voices that she suffered from depression and anxiety after she started taking hormonal birth control. After she stopped taking the pill, her life returned to normal.

Jill Foster shared her struggle with the birth control pill Microgynon on the Daily Mail online. She had “mood swings and uncharacteristic tearful outbursts.” Her relationship almost ended because of this along with her lack of sexual desire.

In her article, she included stories of other women who have emotionally suffered from taking the pill as well.

If you take contraceptives, has your mental health worsened, improved or stayed the same? Share your stories below.

Sources:

Trubow, Wendie. Email interview. August 21, 2012. http://www.visionshealthcare.com/test-post

Rodi, Ingrid. Email interview. August 20, 2012.
http://www.rodimd.com

Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Women’s Mental Health. Harvard Medical School. Do Oral Contraceptives Cause Mood Changes? August 23, 2012. Web.
http://www.womensmentalhealth.org/posts/do-oral-contraceptives-cause-mood-changes

Vork, Lauren. Birth Control and Depression: What You Might Not Know. Web. August 23, 2012.
http://voices.yahoo.com/birth-control-depression-might-not-know-2578819.html?cat=70

Foster, Jill. How the Pill messes with women’s minds. Web. August 23, 2012.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2051085/How-contraceptive-pill-messes-womens-minds-Rage-despair-low-sex-drive-.html

Reviewed August 24, 2012
by Michele Blacksberg RN
Edited by Jody Smith

Add a Comment26 Comments

EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I want to thank the earlier comment for calming me down and giving me hope. I took contraceptives for 3 years straight. Everything was great, except the random "heart hiccups" which started occurring in late 2013. It did not cause me any concern, I just kept taking the pill because it was effective and I was ok besides that. I had an issue early 2014 by missing about 2 pills and I had to stack 2 packs together (skip my placebo pills), which changed my regular cycle. Since then I have been experiencing 24/7 of derealization symptoms, not to mention the breakthrough bleeding I had for 2 months after that, and soon after I had a major panic attack, which honestly felt like my body and chest was on fire and i had to be hospitalized. Afterwards, for the whole year until now, 2015, I had a horrible summer, with new phobias popping up each day that i previously did not even dream about, and I had a few too many non-major panic attacks. I spent so much time at clinics and hospitals trying to understand what was happening to me, and kept getting no particular results. I tested EVERYTHING. This made me a COMPLETELY different person, the real me was still there, which made it scary: I knew there was something not right, my body wasn't letting me enjoy or letting me do anything I did in the past. For example, having a normal cup of coffee, black tea, or a glass of wine/champagne, going to the movies, going into trains or airplanes, attending long lectures at school, writing essays, reading books for school or even for pleasure, having a job. All of those things emphasized my depersonalization and anxiety symptoms and made my body feel like it needed to panic constantly. (feel like I'm in a constant dream state, and on-edge, which is scary as hell.) I DO NOT recommend the contraceptive pill to girls who are very young, or maybe even wait until your cycles regulate, and be sure to have a STABLE ENVIRONMENT when you do take it. I changed 3 jobs in 2014, 1 of which was not paying me on time and checks were bouncing and I ended up owing to the bank, I got expelled from college and spent 1 year studying my ass off to get into university this January, I'm also taking an LSAT for Law School, which is a long shot for me. Not exactly a stable environment. Today is day 1 for me off the pill, and I'm also seeing a psychologist this January. Wish me luck and all the best for you, reader! Your health and happiness above ALL, and never give up! xox

PS: I was on YAZ Drospirenone and ethinyl estradiol tablets 3mg/ 0.02mg

under Bayer Inc.

January 4, 2015 - 10:38pm
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous (reply to Anonymous)

I'm glad I could give you some reassurance! I am also sorry you had to go through such a miserable time from a pill that's suppose to make our lives easier! I came across this amazing article last night and I feel you will benefit from it based on your comment! It changed my life! Best of luck with your journey to Happines!!! http://youcanfreelance.wordpress.com/2013/04/09/setback-my-birth-control-pills-induced-acute-mental-disorder/

January 5, 2015 - 2:16am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I stopped taking my oral birth control pills a little over a week ago and my life feels like it's finally back to normal. I have been taking "the pill" for about two years and it has caused some major issues in my life. I felt like I had no control of my emotions. Everything irritated me and made me mad. Sex drive went down the drain. I felt like I wasn't me anymore. My relationship with my boyfriend took a turn for the worse when all I would do is become upset with him. Everything he did irritated me and I couldn't understand why I had no control over my emotions. I knew this wasn't me. It all hit me one night when my boyfriend told me that I wasn't the sweet, loving, and nice girl he met. It broke my heart and I did some research. I stumbled across other stories online of other woman having the same effects as me. It all started to make sense and I realized that it was my birth control. What frustrates me is when these studies about how oral contraceptives don't effect woman's mental health prove that they have no real effect on our emotional state of minds. We are all different. Our bodies all respond differently to certain things. What doesn't effect her can surely effect me. Think about it: you're taking a pill daily every single day of nothing but hormones. Hormones can effect your mind. I also came across an article about how these birth control manufactures don't 100% specify on the side effects. If you are taking birth control pills now and feel like you are not the same stop taking them for a couple of months. See if you feel any different. I guarantee you will notice a change.

January 2, 2015 - 2:22pm
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

2 times in my life I used that pills for my cyst. Both caused an end to my relationships where we were planning to get married. I used depression pills (very low mg) along with the BC pills, however it made me more sleepy, reluctant for sex and unable to concentrate. I am waiting for the last box to finish impatiently.

October 13, 2014 - 12:06am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I have had a horrible time since I started taking the pill. Severe mood swings, loss of sex drive, spotting in between periods and worst of all, extremely painful stomach aches. The stomach pain starts immediately after I take the pill and seems to be worsening my irritable bowel symptoms. After reading this article I am really upset that my doctor did not inform me of all these other side affects. I don't know what to do at this point. i guess get off the pill.

August 27, 2014 - 11:45am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I am on a generic oral contraceptive I have moments where I can go from happy to tears in less than a minute I am very anxious and feeling depressed

May 18, 2014 - 6:32pm
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We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.