Contraception Can Triple Risk of Suicide, New Study Finds...


CONTRACEPTION
"The encyclical of Pope Paul VI on birth control is true and must be followed by mankind. There shall be no rationalization of sin.”
 - Our Lady, October 2, 1976


"The Eternal Father sends each life with reason. The spirit of life is breathed into that body at the moment of conception. At the moment of conception the soul is united to the body. Though it grows from a small seed, it is living and must not be destroyed! It is murder My children, to destroy the seed.

     "All who commit this terrible act of murder, My children, cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven unless they repent of this foul crime. They must in their repentance accept a penance upon earth for their acts that bring great sorrow to the Heart of the Eternal Father."
 - Our Lady of the Roses, December 27, 1975


The above Messages from Our Lord and Our Lady were given to Veronica Lueken at Bayside, New York. Read more

LifeSiteNews.com reported on November 27, 2017:
by Claire Chretien
Using hormonal contraceptives increases a woman’s risk of suicide, sometimes even tripling it, a new study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry revealed.
The study, Association of Hormonal Contraception With Suicide Attempts and Suicides, was conducted by Danish researchers.

“The patch,” a thin bandage-like piece of plastic that delivers hormones to users, was the method of birth control linked to the highest increase in suicide or suicide attempts. Intrauterine devices (IUDs), the vaginal ring, and then the birth control pill followed.
“Adolescent women are more sensitive than older women to the influence of hormonal contraceptive on risk of a first suicide attempt,” the study says.

Hormonal contraception is “likely to enhance the influence of any additional factor that might cause mood disturbances,” the authors wrote.
Because “adolescence is a period characterized by endogenous sex hormone changes and changing external cultural and social demands,” teen girls will be even more strongly affected by hormonal contraception.
The researchers’ sample “included only girls from the age of 15 who had no prior use of hormonal contraception.”

The study noted that the initiation of a sexual relationship for these women could be considered a factor that led to the suicidality. However, it eventually concluded “sexual activity does not seem to be an important confounder for the relationship between use of hormonal contraception and suicide attempt or suicide.”
The study suggested the hormone changes brought on by the contraceptives are what led to increased suicide attempts.

“Hormonal contraception may have a direct influence on the neurotransmitter and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system involved in stress regulation and the neurobiology of suicidal behavior,” the authors wrote. The data they collected “demonstrates a rapid increase in first suicide attempt after initiation of hormonal contraception.”
Hormonal contraception also increases users’ risk of blood clots. Its other side effects include weight gain, decreased libido, and even changes in attraction.