DO
TUBAL LIGATIONS HAVE HARMFUL EFFECTS UPON WOMEN? |

Dear Friend of
Life,
The April 2007 edition of the Journal of Reproductive
Medicine -- a major mainstream OB/GYN medical journal -- has
published our paper showing that tubal ligation is harmful
to two key measures of the sexual function of women (Warehime,
M. N., Bass, L. and Pedulla, D. Effects of Tubal
Ligation Among American Women; J Reprod Med 2007;
52:263-272).
Using the
Natural Health and Social Life Survey, an unimpeachable
national health and sexual functioning survey authored by
the University of Chicago, my colleagues from the University
of Oklahoma Department of sociology and I found that
women who have had a tubal ligation, as compared with women
who had not had a tubal ligation, were more than 2 times as
likely to report stress interfering with sex over the
previous 12 months, and 1.79 times as likely to report
having seen a physician about sexual problems within the
previous 12 months.
These robust
results were likely not to be spurious because they
persisted after controlling for a variety of potentially
confounding demographic and health data, which also showed
that the findings were not directly attributable to physical
and/or medical complications of the sterilization procedure
itself. We speculate that tubal ligation alters the
interpersonal bond between the marriage partners, probably
through an interference with the type of interpersonal trust
required for happy and secure spousal bonding in marriage.
Also, very consistent with the previously published
literature, tubal ligation likely causes damage to a woman's
body image.
We naturally felt that this paper should have at least a
significant impact on women's family planning decisions, and
on the wider dialogue about women's health issues. This
notwithstanding, and despite securing the services of a
skilled publicist, all of the major media our publicist
contacted decided in the end not to report the publication
of our study. One Wall St Journal writer even asked our
publicist if the paper was religiously motivated !
Women should however learn the truth about these damaging
and harmful procedures, and if they cannot learn it through
the major media outlets, then perhaps we ourselves can
disseminate the findings as widely as possible, thereby at
least doing what we can to spread the news; we believe,
good news.
Please consider whether you feel called or can find the time
to send this message to as many people on your list as
possible. Anybody with access to a medical library can
order the paper directly as well. I am grateful in advance
for any help you can give, and can imagine that it will be
enormously useful to the many women potentially dissuaded
from harming themselves in the future through
sterilization.
Sincerely yours,
Dominic M. Pedulla MD, FACC, CNFPMC, ABVM, ACPh
Associate Clinical
Professor of Medicine, OU Health Sciences Center
Medical Director, The Oklahoma Vein and Endovascular Center
President, The Edith Stein Foundation.
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