The authors hold that the use of oral contraceptives which artificially extend the natural period of fertility by suppressing ovulation is not unethical if there is a true physical pathology which the drugs are being used to correct.
The authors hold that the use of oral contraceptives which artificially extend the natural period of fertility by suppressing ovulation is not unethical if there is a true physical pathology which the drugs are being used to correct.
If the direct aim of the medication is sterility, however, its use is unethical. See p. 295.
The authors hold that the use of oral contraceptives which artificially extend the natural period of fertility by suppressing ovulation is not unethical if there is a true physical pathology which the drugs are being used to correct.
If the direct aim of the medication is sterility, however, its use is unethical. See p. 295.