HealthierU

HealthierU | Why Isn’t There a Male Birth Control Pill?

exploringhealth.org Season 2 Episode 2

Between IUDs, pills, hormonal patches, Depo-Provera injections and many other methods, women trying to prevent pregnancies have an array of options—none of them all that appealing. Let’s turn to the contraceptives available to men: only condoms or vasectomy. In this episode, we ask: Why is there still no male equivalent to the female pill? Why has it taken the contraceptive industry so long to make one? To find out, we talked with Dr. Logan Nickels, PhD, Chief research officer of Male Contraceptive Initiative, an organisation that advocates for male contraceptive research and development, and Dr. Christina Wang, MD, an investigator at the Lundquist institute and a professor of medicine at the UCLA Medical Center. Wang is a prominent researcher in the development of a male hormonal pill called DMAUs. We also share a candid conversation between Emory students “Emma” and “Bob,” a couple discussing who should be responsible for preventing pregnancy in a relationship.

This episode was reported and produced by Linh Kieu, a student at Emory University double majoring in neuroscience and human health. She is passionate about science communication, health storytelling, and making research discoveries accessible to audiences everywhere.

Studies and reports referenced in this episode:

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The Emory Center for the Study of Human Health was developed to expand health knowledge and translate this knowledge to all aspects of life – for the individual and populations as a whole. The Center assembles the extraordinary faculty, researchers and thought leaders from across disciplines, departments, schools and institutions to bring this knowledge to Emory University students and inspire them to become leaders for the next generation in meeting challenges facing human health.

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