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Actively taking birth control pills may cause depressive mood: Study reveals it may not be immediately obvious

The study's result is noteworthy, revealing how the depressive mood might seem misleading in the different phase of intaking the pills.

Published on: Jan 08, 2025 05:43 PM IST
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Women take oral contraceptives or birth control pills to prevent accidental pregnancies. However, these oral contraceptives may also influence moods, potentially making birth control pill users more prone to depression, according to a study published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology. The study delves into how these oral contraceptives impact mental health. Birth control pills essentially control hormones to prevent pregnancy and regulate the menstrual cycle.

Negative impact on mood

Oral contraceptive alters the hormones to prevent pregnancy, leading to depressive mood. (Shutterstock)
Oral contraceptive alters the hormones to prevent pregnancy, leading to depressive mood. (Shutterstock)

The study elaborated on how birth control pills contain ‘synthetic hormones’ where the aim is the to prevent release of the egg from the ovary. The study further highlighted that birth control pills do have some benefits like reducing menstrual cramps and acne breakouts. But this has the potential downside of aggravating the woman's mood.

The researchers examined 53 women, aged 18-26 who had been using combined oral contraceptives for at least three months. The participants were tested on two phases of their contraceptive cycle: one when they were actively taking hormones (the active phase) and another when they were not (the inactive phase). The tests included a plethora of mood assessment questionnaires that assessed their moods and to see if there’s any pattern.

When women actively consume the pills, they are more likely to be depressed.

The results of the study underscored a gap in the assessment of the mood of the women. The self-reported data (when participants give their perspective on their moods rather than scientific observations or deductions) of the women on birth control pills showed high negative feelings like depressive moods. As per the study, according to the self-reported data, the negative mood was more during the inactive phase.

But when the researchers assessed (cognitive assessments through Affect Misattribution Procedure and Emotional Stroop Task) how the women reacted to certain images (sad or angry faces) and words, they revealed that women exhibited more depressive moods when they were on active hormonal pills. This stands especially true for those women who were already exhibiting signs of depression even before taking the pills. However, this may not seem apparent.

ALSO READ: Does birth control increase the risk of blood clots?

This discrepancy in the self-reported data and researchers’ assessments shows that while often they may not always recognize the effects of birth control pills on their mood, the underlying cognitive patterns suggest a more depressive response when they are actively taking the hormones.

The birth control pills create hormonal changes which may contribute to shifts in how emotions are processed, but the effect is not the same for everyone.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.

ALSO READ: Study reveals walking reduces depression risk: Find out how much your daily step count helps

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Adrija Dey

Adrija Dey’s proclivity for observation fuels her storytelling instinct. As a lifestyle journalist, she crafts compelling, relatable narratives across diverse touchpoints of the human experience, including wellness, mental health, relationships, interior design, home decor, food, travel, and fashion that gently nudge readers toward living a little better. For her, stories exist in flesh and bones, carried by human vessels and shaped through everyday endeavours. It is the small stories we live and share that make us human. After all, humans and their lores are the most natural and raw repositories of stories, and uncovering them, for her, is akin to peeling an orange under a winter afternoon sun. Always up for a chat, she believes the best stories come from unfiltered yapping, where "too much information" is kind of the point. A graduate of Indraprastha College for Women, University of Delhi, and an alumna of the Indian Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC), Delhi, Adrija spends her idle hours cocooned with herbal tea and a gripping thriller, scribbling inner monologues she loosely calls poetic pieces, often with her succulents in attendance. On lazier days, she can be found binge-watching, for the nth time, one from her comfort-show holy trinity: The Office (US), Brooklyn Nine-Nine, or Modern Family. Dancing by herself to her peppy playlists, however, is an everyday ritual she swears by religiously.

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Catch your daily dose of Fashion, Taylor Swift, Health, Festivals, Travel, Relationship, Recipe and all the other Latest Lifestyle News on Hindustan Times Website and APPs.
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