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To mitigate the effects of climate change, one researcher calls for a ‘contraception revolution’

To mitigate the effects of climate change, one researcher is calling for a “contraception revolution.”
In a new perspective piece in NEJM, one Boston University researcher is calling for new and better contraceptives.

Discussions about mitigating climate change usually involve strategies like cutting back on fossil fuel use or reducing reliance on plastic. But a more controversial and less discussed approach is population control. To that end, one researcher is calling for new and better contraceptives.

In a perspective piece published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, reproductive health researcher Deborah Anderson argues that it’s time for a new “contraception revolution.”

The first revolution in the past century brought the birth control we at last count. “As the global population continues to grow, pressures [on the environment] will increase and become more critical,” Anderson wrote. Some scientists that having one fewer child can lead to roughly 30 times a reduction in carbon emissions than living car-free.

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