What Every Woman Should Know
I’ll admit, I used to be a smoker. Albiet a “social smoker”, I was a smoker nonetheless. I was recently talking to a friend of mine who works in the medical field about how bad cigarettes are for your health and she mentioned the lethal combination of smoking and birth control. Upon digging a little further, I feel as if I’ve been a walking timebomb and never knew it.
We all know cigarettes are bad for us and for those who are not ready to quit smoking, I don’t believe there is much more you can say to get them to quit unless they are ready to quit for themselves. However, I would have quit long ago if I had encountered a gynecologist who truly cared about my health. It was always phrased to me that cigarettes would decrease the effectiveness of the birth control, not that I might have a heart attack. My friend informed me that she had a patient come in to their office who had a heart attack at 35 years-old because she was a heavy smoker and used birth control. Come to find out, your risk for heart attack increases 30 times when you combine the two. And it’s not just heart attacks that you’re at risk for. Your chance for blood clots increases as well as general heart disease. One of those little suckers gets loose and you could be looking at some serious brain damage!
I’m not one for scare tactics, so I’ve listed some helpful resources below. My main reason for addressing this is that I have been on low-dose birth control for over 10 years and not once has a gyno mentioned that I was putting myself at such high risk. I understand that any medication has side-effects and birth control has it’s fair share, but I think increasing your risk of heart disease (dare I say, death?!) should be something you mention to your patients.
The most helpful article I have found on the matter is at Stop Smoking. There is even more information regarding the effect of cigarettes on your fertility and fetus at Contraception Online and details on birth control and all its side-effects at eMedicine Health.
