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IS USING A CONDOM MORALLY GOOD WHEN MY
WIFE IS BREAST FEEDING AND WE DON’T KNOW WHEN FERTILITY RETURNS? |
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Dear
Fr. Matthew @ the Abbey,
Can you please give me some solid, straight-forward
counsel on the topic of contraception with regards
to the following situation? Can we use a condom
during sexual intercourse until my wife is done
breastfeeding and she can properly chart her
menstrual cycle?
My wife & I have 3 boys ages 5, 3 and 3 months. The
5 year old and 3 year old just had their birthdays
in November. So all 3 boys are still very young. My
wife has a herniated, bulging disc in her lower back
which made the pregnancy very difficult. It also
hinders her abilities to function on a daily basis
depending on if the disc gets "aggravated".
We are open to a new baby. But we would just prefer
to wait for a while for my wife to recuperate. She
is breast feeding right now. But she also was breast
feeding with the first 2 boys and still had her
menstrual cycle within 2 months after giving birth.
She does the breast feeding all the time and the
baby sleeps with us. This time she has gone 3 months
and has not had a menstrual cycle yet. But she is
scared to have any sexual intercourse with me
because many women get pregnant at this time. A
woman becomes fertile before the bleeding starts and
there is no warning as to when fertility returns.
We want to breast feed the baby because it is
healthy for the baby. We could stop breast feeding
so that she will return her menstrual cycle more
rapidly, but the baby receives so many benefits from
it that we really want to continue for about 6 to 9
months. Please write me back and thank you so much.
God Bless, Chris
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Dear Chris,
Your question has both a moral and a medical dimension. I
will only address the moral aspect. Dr. Mary Martin OB/GYN
will address the medical aspect.
Condoms are always immoral, since they deliberately turn
against the fertility of the present marital act. They are
always an immoral means to accomplish the ends of
responsible parenthood.
The problem here is that you have legitimate reasons for
spacing the next pregnancy, and you do not know when your
wife’s fertility returns. I know that various NFP methods
(Creighton model, CCL, BOM, etc.) are able to detect the
signals of returning fertility during breastfeeding. You
must consult the teachers of these models, and see what can
be done to learn how to read your irregular patterns.
If there is uncertainty about when fertility is about to
return, then the morally appropriate thing to do is to
refrain from the marital act until you are able to know
exactly where you are in your cycle. Now for the medical
opinion:
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Hi Chris,
Your question was referred to me by Fr. Daniel McCaffrey
from NFP Outreach Ministries. I am a Board-certified
Obstetrician Gynecologist practicing in Oklahoma City and
your question is a common one. My patients are also very
surprised to learn that Natural Family Planning is a more
effective way to space pregnancies than traditional
contraceptives. I practice in full compliance with the
Catholic Church teaching and can reassure you that it is
entirely possible to avoid conception even during breast
feeding.
Although there are currently 6 methods of NFP taught in the
US, I present the Billings Ovulation Method to my patients
as a very simple way to determine potential fertility. There
are only 4 rules and temperatures and digital exams are not
used, making this acceptable to women of all cultures and
within all times of reproductive life. In fact, the BOM is
taught in 120 countries world-wide and is one of only three
approved contraception methods in China. It is based on the
fact that the pattern of a woman's vaginal discharge,
whether changing, or unchanging, correlates precisely with
the ovarian hormones. For more information, please go to
www.boma-usa.com or
www.woomb.org
I use the BOM to
make gynecologic and infertility diagnoses. It is invaluable
as a diagnostic tool but is 99.5% effective in delaying or
preventing conception as well. Published data on the condom
use has an effectiveness rate of only 85%. Even the 99%
effectiveness rate advertised by the pharmaceutical
companies for chemical contraceptives is actually only 90%
in published data. The issue is that couples who use
contraceptives are having sexual contact during the fertile
phase because they have been taught erroneously that it is
impossible to know when a woman is potentially fertile. My
professional reputation is staked on the effectiveness of
NFP. No pregnancies have occurred within my practice if the
4 rules were followed.
I will leave the moral issues of contraception to Fr.
McCaffrey, et al.
God's blessings to you and your family,
Mary W. Martin, M.D.,FACOG
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