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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe MAHA-Fueled Rise of Natural Family Planning
Since the birth control pill gained widespread acceptance in the 1960s and 1970s, mainstream political voices have rarely expressed opposition to the medication celebrated for giving women more control over their reproductive lives. For decades, only certain traditional Catholic and Christian circles publicly rejected the pill and other forms of contraception, believing that some methods came too close to abortion, or that the act of intercourse should always have the potential to bring about new life.
But a practice known as fertility awareness or natural family planning originally devised over 50 years ago by doctors with ties to the Catholic church is now gaining support among a broader group of social conservatives and adherents of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement. The rising interest comes as many prominent conservatives are encouraging women to abandon birth control pills and other forms of hormonal contraceptives.
Officials in the Trump administration have also been exploring ways for the federal government to direct funding toward teaching more women of reproductive age to accurately identify their fertile windows, according to three people with knowledge of the discussions. And though much of the work is framed as part of the administrations broader effort to combat infertility, many conservatives hope the new emphasis on fertility awareness will also inspire women seeking to prevent pregnancy to stop taking birth control.
Fertility-awareness-based methods are distinct from the unreliable rhythm method, which relies only on the date of a womans last menstrual period to predict when she is fertile hinging instead on physical signals of fertility. They can also be used to help identify underlying reproductive health conditions.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/09/us/politics/maha-natural-family-planning.html
DBoon
(24,498 posts)RockRaven
(18,349 posts)When you add people in to the abstract theory, you get the reality of a 25% failure rate per year.
At that rate you could use this system always attempting to avoid pregnancy your entire life, and still end up with a von Trapp or Cheaper by the Dozen sized family.
Diamond_Dog
(39,100 posts)I hate it when religion sticks its nose in something thats none of their business.