Prevention, not Prescriptions

Have you heard of Kathleen Slattery–Moschkau? She’s a mom, wife and former drug-pusher (her words, not mine) who’s reformed, and using her zeal against big pharma to promote all things healthy, whole and fun. She’s gone from rebel with a cause to writer, radio talk show host, and movie producer–still with a cause.

Well, one of her creative and great ideas is Prevention, Not Prescriptions Tuesdays, which is a jazzy blog idea to cultivate conversation, inter-blog promotion, and promote holistic and preventative health care.

Well, the outlook of Natural Family Planning and Fertility Awareness advocates definitely jives with Kathleen’s sassy and smart pro-woman, pro-wellness outlook, so I thought I’d spread the word. I’ll be doing my darndest to jump on the PNP Tuesday train. If you have a pro-fertility blog, whatever your focus is, I’d encourage you to consider it, and jump on board. Here’s the deal:

What is Prevention Not Prescriptions?
It’s a simple blog carnival held every Tuesday specifically organized around the idea of ‘Prevention Not Prescriptions’. It’s information and inspiration. It’s for the bloggers, doctors, journalists, moms, dads, teachers, alternative health practitioners and everyone else who has had it up to here! with the status quo of a society pushing and turning to prescription drugs as a quick fix for their bodies or their lives.

If it relates to healthier living, we want to hear it. Here are a few ideas of things you can post…

  • Advice/suggestions
  • Your personal anecdotes
  • Commentary on related headlines
  • Film/media reviews
  • The politics of pills and health (as it relates to prevention)
  • Fitness, stress, nutrition related information (and yes, even recipes)
  • Anything that might get others fired up to think twice before they pop that next Rx pill

We’d love to hear from and offer up a variety of voices and topics. There are no weekly themes. And participation is super easy…

Here’s how it works:

If you have a blog entry or article related to healthy living that you’d like to share, email us the link at anytime.  If your post is from your archives, please repost it so it’s a current entry on your site, or write a new entry directing people back to your archived post.

There’s only one hitch…you must include a link back here so that others can find out how to participate.  If you don’t provide a link back to this page, you will not be included. We’ll compile all links that come in during the week into one blog entry that we’ll post on The Kathleen Show blog the following Tuesday.

    • Links must be received by Noon CT on Monday to be included in Tuesday’s post.
    • And don’t forget to join the conversation.  Create a personal Typepad profile and leave a comment about your post once it’s up.  You’ll be able to find your entry and create a profile directly at The Kathleen Show blog the Tuesday after you submit your link.
    • We’ll also have a running archive below where you’ll be able to find past week’s posts.

Eggs in an Ancestral Basket

Eggs in a nest

From Taking Charge of Your Fertility:

Do you realize that a part of every single one of us resided inside our maternal grandmother’s uterus, even before our own mothers were born? Unlike male fetuses which contain no sperm, female fetuses already contain all the eggs that the newborn child will ever have. What that means, practically speaking, is that when your mother was just a fetus inside hermother, she already had developed one of the eggs that eventually became you.

Wow.

FertilityCare iPod Episode on Infertility

6.2 million women experience some sort of compromised fertility in the United States. Are you one of them? If you are blessed with your full fertility, chances are you know someone who struggles with or has struggled with it.

In this FertilityCare Consult episode, show number fourteen on Infertility, Dr. Thomas Hilgers talks about the major differences between the ordinary approach to treating infertility and the FertilityCare and NaProTechnology way. The ordinary way is to treat the symptoms, and if all else fails, try IVF. The NaProTechnology way is to begin learning about and charting your cycle through the Creighton Method of FertilityCare, then working with your FertilityCare Practitioner and Medical Consultant to identify and diagnose the underlying problem to the compromised fertility. Napro treats the disease, not the symptom, and with much higher success, lower cost and much less suffering.

Do you know the success rate of pregnancies achieved and carried to term with IVF? It’s in the low to mid 20 %. With the Creighton Method of FertilityCare (charting your cycle) and subsequent diagnoses and treatment, do you know what the success rate is? At the lowest, it’s around 35%, and at best 80%, depending on the underlying cause.

If you’ve been having difficulty achieving a pregnancy, or have had recurrent miscarriages, you’ll definitely want to listen to this episode. You may wish to follow up by listening to the episode on Recurrent Miscarriages. So many people have amazing stories of going through the IVF process, only to find disappointment or disillusionment. But there is hope. Please pass this on to any one who might be interested or find healing in new hope for infertility, as well as insight for women’s wellness.

A Day in the Life of Understanding Your Fertility

Overheard between an NFP couple the other day…

Wife: Sweetie, you are so handsome! [Big hug, smooch.] Babe, you are a handome man. Why are you so dang cute?! Those glasses–you look soo handsome in glasses. Ooh, I married a handsome man.

Husband: [Cute, condescending smile.] Oh, sweetie. You’re fertile aren’t you?

Natural Methods of Family Planning–what’s yours?

Marquette U. seeks Participants for NFP Study

This just in…

The Institute of Natural Family Planning, College of Nursing, Marquette University, is launching an NFP study.  This e-mail is to provide you with the information about recruiting volunteers for the study (see below).

The study is a randomized comparison of two Internet supported methods of NFP.  This is the first randomized comparison study of NFP methods since the late 1970s-early 1980s.  

All eligible participants for this study will receive a free ClearBlue Easy Fertility monitor (value, $200.00).

 

If you qualify, they encourage you or your married friends to consider taking part in this study.  

  

Marquette University

College of Nursing

Institute for Natural Family Planning

 

Effectiveness Study on Two Internet-Based Natural Family Planning Methods

 

We are looking for couples who are interested in using natural family planning (NFP) to avoid pregnancy for at least one year and would be willing to participate in a study to determine the effectiveness of two NFP methods: 1) electronic hormonal fertility monitoring; and 2) self-observation of cervical mucus to estimate the time of fertility.  Both of these methods will include the use of an online (Internet) charting system that automatically computes the estimated time of fertility.

 

To be eligible for the study the woman NFP user needs to:

 

·      be between the age of 18 and 42

·      be in a sexually active committed relationship with a man

·      have a menstrual cycle range of 21-42 days

and

·      have not used Depo (injectable) contraception for the past 6 months

·      have not used oral or patch hormonal contraception for the past 3 months

·      have not breast-fed baby for at least three months

·      have no known fertility problems

·      not be using medications that interfere with fertility

·      not smoke cigarettes; and

·      not be pregnant.


Her male partner needs to:

  • be between the ages of 18 and 50 years-old
  • have no known fertility problems, and
  • be in a sexually active committed relationship  with his lone woman partner. 

The potential participants will also need to be open to a possible pregnancy. 

When used correctly the NFP methods are estimated to be 98-99% effective. 

When not used consistently and according to instructions, the methods are estimated to be 86-90% effective.

 

All participants will receive a $200 ClearBlue Easy Fertility Monitor and $10 for each menstrual cycle charted online.  However, the participants who are in the cervical mucus observation group will only receive the fertility monitor after completing the 12 months of charting.  Couples who agree to participate will be automatically assigned either to the fertility monitor or the cervical mucus group. 

 

All participants will be asked to fill out a 10 item user satisfaction survey at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months. 

 

If you are interested in participating please visit this Web site:  http://nfpstudy.marquette.edu

  

If you wish to immediately register, see:

http://nfpstudy.marquette.edu/portal/login.php

 

If you have further questions about this study please contact:

Dr. Richard J. Fehring, PhD, RN

414-288-3838

richard.fehring@marquette.edu  

 

Women Healed: Infertility

pmsI nixed the Teens and Birth Control show on the FertilityCare iPod queue because it was more moral and cultural commentary than about diagnosing young women’s menstrual issues. It was a good show, and a little insightful into the average teen-and-mother/ doctor experience; i.e., what the doctor says when prescribing versus what he really things, and the general lack of knowledge into women’s wellness. What it comes down to is that typical Ob/Gyns are not prepared to identify, diagnose and treat girls’ or womens’ wellness issues without the Pill. There’s a lot of reasons for this–lack of education, contraceptive bias, pharma kickbacks for prescribing the Pill, etc.–but in the end, the Pill serves as a band aid over the underlying issue, which may persist for years and cause problems down the line. However, I was looking for more of the medical/ fertility commentary on that issue.

Which brings me to the next episode I’d like to feature: Women Healed: Infertility. In this episode Dr. Hilgers talks about FertilityCare vs. IVF, and why FertilityCare blows IVF out of the water, not only for helping people conceive, but also for treating their fertility issues. His years of research and medical practice developed into something called NaProTechnology, or Natural Procreative Technology. It’s a major breakthrough for reproductive science, offering real solutions to some real issues:

  • Infertility
  • Menstrual Cramps
  • Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
  • Ovarian Cysts
  • Irregular or abnormal bleeding
  • Polycystic ovarian disease
  • Repetitive miscarriage
  • Postpartum depression
  • Prematurity prevention
  • Hormonal abnormalities

…and so on.

It’s really quite astounding once one looks into NaProTechnology, which is a fertility-based women’s care, not fertility-control, or fertility-suppression methods. It works with your whole body because fertility is a state of wellness, not a disease to treat. Dr. Hilgers has put together a book of the same title of this post, which you can find here. Are you ready to find out more about being healed?

Renowned Doctor to Speak in Wisconsin

The LaCrosse Guild of the Catholic Medical Association will host its annual White Mass for Healthcare Professionals on Saturday, October 18, the Feast of St. Luke at the Our Lady of Guadalupe Shrine in LaCrosse. The Mass will take place within the context of a Conference given by Dr. Thomas Hilgers, award winning founder of the Pope Paul VI Institute for the study of Human Reproduction. This conference will introduce the participants to the science of NaProTechnology (Natural Procreative Technology). NaProTechnology is a scientifically validated method of assisting couples to manage their fertility entirely consistent with the ethical teachings of the Catholic Church. There are a growing number of trained NaProTechnology consultants successfully using this effective and natural approach.

I highly recommend this event to anyone in the Wisconsin area, or even anyone in the Midwest. Dr. Hilgers has done tremendously groundbreaking work in Obstetrics and Gynecology. People who find themselves infertile, struggling with specific fertility issues like PCOS, Endometriosis and the like have found great encouragement and medical help by using NaProTechnology. I especially encourage Medical Professionals, Catholic and non-Catholic alike, to come hear more about his and his colleagues’ tremendous work.

Friday, October 17
Optional pre-conference evening

6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Saturday, October 18
8:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
at

 

Who should attend:

Physicians and physicians in training.
Nurses, student nurses, NFP instructors.
Clergy and seminarians.
Lay persons interested in natural procreative technology.

UPDATE: I found a registration form here: www.madisondiocese.org/nfp

Green is the New Black: How NFP is beyond trend

 

There is no doubt that green is “in,” and veteran environmentalists hope that this is one warming trend that continues. But first, what does “Green is the new black” mean? Most ladies and fashion hipsters know the phrase, “______ is the new black.” It means the object of the phrase is the new basic—the black dress, the go-with-everything shoes, jeans, etc.—the thing that is a foundation to fashionable living. The phrase has been co-opted for non-fashion arenas, and I use it here to talk about environmentalism in balance.

While every day is a green day, Earth Day is solemnity in the secular liturgy of environmentalism. There appeared both government and grassroots efforts and celebrations across the globe, with people of all ages from ordinary folks to politicians to A-list celebrities. It was all quiet on the family planning front, though.

While some environmentalists grow caustic over the hip-factor of caring for our planet because it’s something they’ve been at for a long time, I say let’s take advantage of the green fervor to bring to light something many greenies haven’t thought twice about: Natural Family Planning, or NFP.

Doesn’t it seem interesting that we’ll go to great lengths to ensure our meat, dairy and other grocery products are “all natural” and hormone free, but then we’ll turn around and ingest, poke or patch our bodies with all sorts of synthetic hormones, the ramifications of which we’re still discovering?

The National Catholic Register wrote last July about the serious effects we’re seeing in the environment because of the residual effects of drugs, or what biologists call “endocrine disruptors”–particularly chemical contraceptives. Now, if the human side effects of hormonal contraception don’t catch your attention, perhaps non-mating intersex fish will hook you. Colorado biologist John Woodling, speaking to the Denver Post in 2005 said, It’s “the first thing that I’ve seen as a scientist that really scared me.” We’re not talking one freak fish here; it’s a significant problem, a problem so significant that the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and the American Pharmacists Association have a major public-awareness campaign regarding this contamination called “Smarxt Disposal.”

Years before the green trend train got going, Pope John Paul II said in 1990 that we have “a grave responsibility to preserve [the earth's] order for the well-being of future generations.” Pope Benedict, dubbed as “The Green Pope,” further emphasizes the need to “focus on the needs of sustainable development.” However, he reminds us that there must be a balance between the environment and people reminding us that humans are “the only one of all creatures on this earth that can establish a free and conscious relationship with his creator.”

 

With Pope Benedict, I urge my brothers and sisters in Christ and all people of good will to steward the earth’s treasures, but also to remember that we must value human life above all. “Population control” programs treat the humans as disposable carbon consumers, rather than unrepeatable and irreplaceable gifts from God, not to mention potential problem solvers to the world’s social and climate conundrums.

 

The contraceptive mentality of today’s culture sees fertility as disease and babies as burdens, but we forget that children are a blessing, and within each child is a God-given mission to be great and to do great things. Al Gore and Davis Guggenheim teamed up to make the 2006 Oscar award winning An Inconvenient Truth, their documentary on the global warming crisis. It was groundbreaking moment for filmmaking as well as the Green movement, but it would not have been possible without their conceptions and births.

 

NFP is of inestimable value for the world for more than just the environmental credibility. It also fosters fertility appreciation, love of children and has marital and psychological benefits. It is shared system of family planning that fosters communication, builds prudence and self-control and decreases sexual objectification. As I’ve said before, NFP doesn’t just have natural benefits; it has supernatural benefits. Gore and Guggenheim co-created a film that won an Oscar, but couples who cooperate with God’s plan for marriage and sex experience a personal & spiritual vitality that not only nourishes communication and mutual self respect, but it makes them icons of the Most Holy Trinity. That’s not a red carpet line, but a heavenly promise.

 

(C) 2008 The Catholic Herald, Madison, WI.

Dangers of the Birth Control Pill


Audio from Janet Smith and Jason Evert. Even if you’re pro contraceptives, I challenge you to listen to this entire clip.

Update: For more information (with footnotes), see this online brochure. What your doctor is reluctant to tell you, and what the pharma companies will minimize at all costs.

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