Pregnancy
& Childbirth / Religious Books
Great
advances were made in birth control with the improvement of intrauterine devices
in the 1950s and the development of the birth control pill in 1960 by the American
biologist Gregory Pincus. By the 1990s long-lasting hormonal implants and contraceptive
injections such as Depo-Provera were developed. These options gave women more
control in deciding whether to become pregnant. Voluntary sterilization, involving
vasectomies in men and tubal sterilization in women, emerged as a popular way
of permanent birth control. Unwanted pregnancies, however, remained a serious
problem in the late 1990s. Researchers still sought more convenient and safer
methods of birth control, including a male birth control pill. By
1975 physicians were able to diagnose some congenital or inherited diseases before
childbirth. Doctors take samples of placental cells or of the amniotic fluid around
the fetus to determine whether hereditary blood diseases, Down syndrome, defects
of the spine, or other congenital diseases are present. Even the sex of a fetus
may be known in advance. In addition to advances in early diagnosis, progress
occurred in identifying the causes of some birth defects. Excess alcohol consumption
during pregnancy was linked to fetal alcohol syndrome, and inadequate intake of
the vitamin folic acid was linked to spina bifida and other neural tube defects. Advances
in treating infertility, which prevents couples from having children, began with
the world's first so-called test-tube baby born in the 1980s through in vitro
fertilization. Other forms of assisted reproduction soon became available. Researchers
in 1997 cloned a lamb from cells taken from an adult ewe. It led to speculation
that human cloning could become another option in human reproduction. |