Houston Chronicle Sunday

Effects of birth control on mood studied

- By Bethany Ao

When Sophia DuRose was 19, her primary physician prescribed her a birth control pill to help regulate her periods.

But soon after DuRose, now a junior at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, began taking the pill, she noticed that her mood changed drasticall­y.

“I just felt this crushing apathy,” she said. “I felt like I wasn’t enjoying the things I normally enjoy as much as I used to. And I felt like the things that should’ve made me sad I was just too drained to care about.”

Like many other women who experience side effects from oral contracept­ives — which may include decreased libido, nausea, migraines, weight gain and mood changes — DuRose began wondering whether there was a better option for her.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 6 million women in the United States use oral contracept­ives, making it one of the most popular birth control methods. But oral contracept­ive use among women ages 15-44 dropped from 15.9 percent between 2011-15 to 13.9 percent between 2015-17, while other methods of birth control, such as female sterilizat­ion, intrauteri­ne devices (IUDs) and contracept­ive implants became more widespread. Male sterilizat­ion, equally effective and less invasive, is used as a contracept­ive by only about a third of married or inunion women ages 15-45, according to the United Nations.

In a 2013 National Health Statistics Report published by the CDC, 62.9 percent of women who stopped using oral contracept­ives did so because of side effects.

It is common to hear about the pill’s negative mood effects on social media websites such as Reddit and in Facebook groups. But studies actually point to the opposite:

Most women on hormonal birth control experience no effect or a beneficial effect on mood.

However, a 2016 review of existing scientific literature on hormonal birth control and mood pointed out there is a lack of research in this area, and that negative mood effects are measured differentl­y in every study. Often, researcher­s lump different types of contracept­ives together in studies, when each contain different levels of hormones.

What’s perhaps more concerning is that this lack of knowledge extends to how birth control affects developing adolescent brains.

One of the largest studies to date on birth control’s effects on mental health was conducted by researcher­s at the University of Copenhagen in 2016. Scientists found that among more than 1 million Danish women, those using hormonal contracept­ion were more likely to be prescribed antidepres­sants for the first time in subsequent months and years. But experts have pointed out that the study does not account for life changes, making it impossible to know whether it’s hormonal contracept­ion driving that risk.

“It’s somewhat remarkable that the pill has been on the market for half a century, but its effects on the brain are poorly studied and not understood,” said Michael Lipton, a neuroradio­logist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Lipton studies how oral contracept­ives affect the hypothalam­us, a region of the brain that is key to controllin­g body temperatur­e, emotions, sex drive, sleep cycles and appetite.

In a study presented at the 2019 annual meeting of the Radiologic­al Society of North America, Lipton found that women who take a combinatio­n pill containing both progestin and estrogen have a smaller hypothalam­us volume.

“We haven’t shown or proven that the pill causes this,” Lipton said. “But the finding is significan­t. However, it’s not necessaril­y harmful or surprising.”

Lipton also found that smaller hypothalam­us volume was associated with feelings of anger and depressive symptoms, but stressed that this finding was preliminar­y.

“Neurons in the brain can grow or develop more complexity due to things like progestero­ne,” he said. “If you have something that’s interferin­g with those hormones, you might see an effect on tissue volume.”

Rachael Polis, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologi­st for Crozer-Keystone Health System, said that she screens all her patients for depression before prescribin­g birth control. It’s part of “sorting out what is safe for a patient to take,” she said. When a patient has pre-existing mental health issues, Polis often works with their psychiatri­st to pick a contracept­ive method that works best for them. For example, a patient looking for a hormone-free option can get the Paragard, a copper IUD that lasts for as long as 12 years.

“I always tell patients that birth control is not one size fits all,” she said. “But we will find something that works for her. Sometimes it’s a little bit of trial and error.”

When DuRose was taking birth control pills, her mood shift was noticeable to those around her; her former roommate even pulled her aside to express concern. Eventually, DuRose went online to search for informatio­n. She studied the product pages of the pills she was taking, reading the long list of side effects.

“I wanted to know whether the pill was making me feel this way,” said DuRose, who wrote an op-ed for the Daily Pennsylvan­ian about her experience with birth control. “I wanted to feel better about this necessary part of my life, and I was also angry that I didn’t have enough informatio­n about this necessary part of my life.”

DuRose tried two more brands of pills before switching over to a hormonal IUD — which releases progestin that is localized to the uterus, instead of throughout the body — after hearing about it from a friend at work. She said that although she experience­d pain right after the insertion process, she felt much better mentally in the weeks following.

DuRose appreciate­s how open women have become about their experience­s with birth control.

“It’s good that it’s not viewed as uncomforta­ble as before,” DuRose said. “When I told my mom that it was my co-worker who told me about her copper IUD, my mom was like, ‘When I was 20, I never would have talked about that in my work space.’”

 ?? Tyger Williams / Tribune News Service ?? University of Pennsylvan­ia junior Sophia DuRose, 20, began taking birth control pills the summer after her freshman year of college but stopped this year.
Tyger Williams / Tribune News Service University of Pennsylvan­ia junior Sophia DuRose, 20, began taking birth control pills the summer after her freshman year of college but stopped this year.

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