Prioreschi P
Creighton University, School of Medicine, Department of pharmacoloogy, Division of History of Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska 68278.
Vesalius. 1995 Dec;1(2):77-87.
The author discusses the validity of the claim that, in Antiquity, effective contraceptives and abortifacients were available, were widely used, and their use was responsible for the decline of population in certain periods. After reviewing the maneuvers and drugs used for those purposes, the author concludes that ancient physicians did not have at their disposal effective contraceptives and abortifacients other than those that acted mechanically. In view of the danger associated with the mechanical induction of abortion, the ineffectiveness of pharmacological agents, and the limitations of mechanical contraceptives, it is concluded that drugs and other means of inducing abortion and contraception had a very limited impact on population in Antiquity.
作者探讨了这样一种说法的合理性,即在古代,有效的避孕药和堕胎药已然存在,且被广泛使用,其使用导致了某些时期人口的减少。在回顾了用于这些目的的手法和药物后,作者得出结论,古代医生除了使用机械作用的方法外,并没有有效的避孕药和堕胎药。鉴于机械引产的危险性、药物的无效性以及机械避孕的局限性,得出的结论是,药物及其他引产和避孕手段在古代对人口的影响非常有限。