NATURAL
FAMILY PLANNING
(ADVICE LEAFLET)
The alternative approach which is therefore enjoying increasing publicity and demand is to offer couples a programme of education in fertility awareness, teaching them to identify accurately these few fertile days in each cycle. The couple can then build a natural loving sexual relationship around the fertility cycle, including the fertile days if they wish to plan a pregnancy, and avoiding them if pregnancy is not desired at that moment. It provides an efficient means of fertility control which is non-invasive and therefore free of side-effects and health hazards. This can be termed the "ecological approach", otherwise known as the Fertility Awareness Method, or Natural Family Planning. Past Myths. The reasons for the high failure rate (declared in all studies to be 33%) are obvious - irregular cycles, and misinformation. The egg, in fact, is fertilisable for only 8-24 hours, but sperm can
live up to 6 days given certain circumstances. The luteal phase (the
time between ovulation and menstruation) is not a fixed gap of 14 days,
but can be as short as 10 days for some women, and as long as 16 days
for others. How does a woman know which one she has? No calculation
method could embrace so many variables. Yet despite all that, it is
amazing how many couples have used this method with success. I am meeting
them all the time in NFP clinics! This calendar calculation method,
with all its inaccuracies, is of course still used in most New Knowledge. The limitations of the method were, though it accurately confirmed the event of ovulation, and released nearly half the average cycle for infertile intercourse, it gave no warning of an approaching ovulation. When couples had intercourse based on Calendar Rhythm calculations before ovulation, the failure rate jumped from virtually zero to 19%. The Temperature Method is also used in subfertility clinics, but its benefits are often lost when couples are told to have intercourse when the temperature dips and again when it rises. The Temperature could "dip" on any day if she took it earlier than usual. If she waits till the rise, hormone assays have shown that the rise can be delayed up 10 <to hours after ovulation. Since the egg is fertilisable for as little as 8-24 hours it could well be a case of closing the door after the horse has bolted. What was needed, both to plan or avoid pregnancy successfully, was a sign obvious to a woman, that her egg was ripening in her ovary. Here we are indebted to a team of doctors and researchers in Western Australia, headed by Drs. John and Evelyn Billings, who began to study the pattern of vaginal discharge in women. After years of double-checking their work with hormone assays, this is what they learnt: As the egg-sac (follicle) starts ripening in the ovary, a hormone called estrogen is produced, which stimulates glands in the neck of the womb (cervix) to produce a wet, slippery, relatively clear mucus discharge. This mucus is alkaline and neutralises the acidity in the vagina, enabling sperms to survive in it. It is also rich in nutrients which attract and feed the sperms prolonging their life for several days. Its thin watery nature has a molecular structure that produces a swimming lane structure through which sperm can migrate out of the vagina and into the cervix at incredible speed, and thereafter upwards towards the ripening egg. The mucus increases in flow for approximately the 6 days that the follicle takes to fully ripen. It produces a sensation of wetness and lubrication at the external opening of the vagina which most women cannot fail to notice. When ovulation is imminent, the wet slippery mucus can become so clear that it looks like raw egg-white. This mucus s vital for sperm, who can live minutes or hours at most without it. But once in this mucus, the sperm can live for 3-6 days inside the neck of the womb. As the egg is released, the mucus, having done its work, dries up and forms a plug in the neck of the womb to prevent the passage of any more sperms upwards. In that way the womb cavity is kept clear ready to receive the baby down the fallopian tube should it be conceived. The womb lining becomes very thick and spongy, ready for the baby to implant into it. However, some 10 to 16 days after ovulation, if there is no baby implanted in that lining, then the lining is washed away in menstruation, and a new fertility cycle starts. For this reason many older midwives used to speak of the menstruation as "the weeping of the disappointed womb". The accuracy of the mucus symptom as a indicator of ovulation is Deyond doubt. The hormone assays of James Brown in Melbourne, now supported by ultrasound studies in many centres, my own included, have all shown that the subjective observations of simple women, (even those with minimal education levels in developing countries,) are as accurate in identifying ovulation as tests for L.H. peak. When these observations of mucus patterns are combined with minimal use of the Temperature Method, the biological failure rate of Natural Family Planning is virtually zero. The user failure rate as with all methods can be higher. So whenever I am asked the question "How successful is NFP in preventing pregnancy?", my answer is always the same - "It's as successful as you make it. If you stick with the rules, it works. If you take risks, the failure rate is high because you are using the potentially fertile days". It goes without saying that mucus observation is vital to couples
experiencing subfertility. It frees them from inaccurate calculations
and temperature charts that are only useful in retrospect. Instead
it allows them to identify their potentially fertile phase, no matter
how short or inadequate it may be, and enables them to maximise their
chances of conception. Mrs Colleen Norman
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