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DOES STERILIZATION IN WOMEN CAUSE DECREASED DESIRE?
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Even
more important than preaching about the damage of
contraception is teaching about the immorality of
sterilization. Too many folks have sterilizations with way
too little thought - even folks who know that the church is
against birth control pills seem to think that sterilization
is OK - or at most a venial sin, easily confessed and
forgiven - not the actual mutilation of both body and soul
that it turns out to be.
I see a lot of middle aged women who bemoan that they have
no desire for their husbands (or anyone, actually) any more
- well over 95% of them had a tubal ligation. I can't prove
a connection, but I also see lots of post menopausal women
that have very satisfying love lives with their husbands -
and I can't help but wonder if there is a connection between
the tubal ligation and the decreased desire.... --Alicia
Huntley
The reduced libido phenomenon was common (maybe even
universal) to the 20 Catholic couples that shared their
stories in 'Sterilization Reversal: A Generous Act of Love'
published by One More Soul, but no longer in print.
Sterilization destroyed intimacy; reversal restored it.
Truly amazing!
I suspect that some couples see sterilization as a pro-life
thing to do in that there is no longer a risk of abortion
from hormonal or IUD birth prevention methods. They need a
deeper understanding of God's gift of fertility and the
sacredness of the body. Rare is the homily on abortion;
rarer on contraception; and absent on sterilization. --Steve
Koob
You're right Alicia--check out April 2007 Journal of
Reproductive Medicine, Warehime, Bass, Pedulla, "Tubal
Ligation among American Women". We proved the correctness of
what you're surmising. Previous studies let women color
their answers (on sexual functioning after tubal
sterilization (TS) by their subjective sense of whether TS
helped their sexuality or not. American women are
conditioned to look at their TS in such glowingly,
unrealistically, optimistic terms that this rosy
over-optimism about it overpowers any negatives they might
otherwise have had, and the insight to attribute that to the
TS. That TS “improves sexual function” seems an automatic,
unreflective conclusion flowing from the fiat acceptance of
benefit of any and all things that "unencumber" sexuality by
detaching it from conception.
And of course the like-minded authors/investigators never
critically analyze this false equation, having deeply
imbibed "the kool-aid" themselves. A good example was
Costello in the NEJM I think, from 1998 or so. They
simplistically and rather clumsily asked women whether their
TS was a net positive or negative influence on their sexual
function, without any independent objective data analysis
checking that out.
We took the NHSLS dataset (Laumann, U of Chicago) which had
TS and measures of sexual satisfaction/function as
independent variables so the women merely reported the
incidence rather than conceptually or attributionally
connecting the two
Women after TS were 150 to 200 percent more likely to report
"stress interfering with sex" or "go to a doctor for help
with sexual function", and this was independent of any pain,
physical complaints, or post-TS medical complications.
Powerful stuff! No doubt the majority would have judged
their TS helpful to sexuality, even despite these contrary
data, because these falsely rosy views are based on strongly
pro-TS prejudice, one powerfully reinforced in our
"sterilization society".
So you are indeed right.
--Dominic
Pedullah, MD
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Q & A --
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