T O P I C R E V I E W
pamplemousse
Member # 96224
posted 02-12-2013 04:31 PM
Hi! Just a quick question: I was reading this article Her Story: I Had An Abortion in College and the author talks about how she got pregnant while on the pill: quote: One of the biggest questions that plagued both Chris and me was how this had happened. I have been on birth control pills since shortly after starting my period at age 15. I would have menstrual pain so bad that I have a prescription for muscle relaxers. I would not be able to get out of bed on rough days during my flow. So I went on birth control at a young age to regulate those issues. But, somehow, I got pregnant. According to my gynecologist, when my family’s insurance starting only covering the generic brand of pills, my hormones fluctuated too much. Generic medication, for some women, doesn’t work. He informed me that I wasn’t the first he’d seen get pregnant while on a generic. Since then I demand, and pay extra, for name brand pills. A few questions: Does this seem like a legitimate medical explanation? What, if anything, would be the actual chemical difference in a generic pill vs. a name-brand that would cause a disparity? I'm on the generic Tri-Sprintec, which I take perfectly, and I also back up with condoms, but this worried me a little nonetheless. Thanks!
Heather
Member # 3
posted 02-12-2013 04:38 PM
People become pregnant on EVERY brand of pill. To make that clear, in typical use of the pill, 8 of every 100 people who use it become pregnant in one year. In perfect use, around 1 of every 2000 who us it do. This likely wasn't about this person using a generic, which are just as effective as the brand-name. It was likely just about the pill failing, which it does sometimes.
pamplemousse
Member # 96224
posted 02-12-2013 04:58 PM
Gotcha - thank you! I know there's always a risk, but I'm very careful about taking it and this is the first I've heard that implied any actual chemical difference between generics and brand-names. So what exactly is the difference in formulation between them? Thanks so much for your quick response!
Heather
Member # 3
posted 02-12-2013 05:14 PM
There isn't one. A generic of a given brand is the same formulation as that brand. It has to be. Here's some good explanation of that for you: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=whats-the-difference-betw-2004-12-13 I'm sorry to hear someone's doctor implied any different, since they should know better, and even more sorry to hear someone then published that misinformation.