4.5 Article

Oral contraceptive use is not related to gender self-concept

Journal

PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2021.105271

Keywords

Androgens; Expressivity; Femininity; Hormonal contraceptives; Instrumentality; Masculinity; Ovarian hormones

Funding

  1. Jacobs Foundation
  2. National Institutes of Health [T32HD007109]

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The study found no significant differences in gender self-concept between OC users and non-users, as well as no impact of different OC formulations' androgenicity on gender self-concept. This indicates that gender self-concept does not underlie the decision to use or not use OC, highlighting the specificity of exogenous ovarian hormone influences.
Oral contraceptive (OC) use is a valuable and underutilized natural experiment for examining exogenous hormone effects on aspects of cognition and behavior, especially aspects that show sex or gender differences. OC use, however, is not randomly assigned; women who use OCs may systematically differ from non-users for genderlinked reasons that potentially confound investigations of the pharmacokinetic effects of OCs. Thus, the primary aim of this study was to investigate whether OC users and non-users differ in gender self-concepts, as sociocultural factors might influence who uses OCs and why. A secondary aim was to examine whether OC users of different pill formulations differ in gender self-concept. Multivariate analyses of covariance (controlling for age) on a large sample of 395 young adult women revealed no significant differences between OC users (n = 247) and non-users (n = 148) in four aspects of gender self-concept (expressivity, instrumentality, femininity, and masculinity), with univariate effect sizes averaging d = 0.07. Moreover, inferences about group differences did not change when considering sociocultural factors (i.e., reason for OC use) or pharmacokinetic properties of the pills (i.e., androgenicity). Thus, findings indicate that differences in gender self-concept do not underlie OC use and non-use, and that the androgenicity of different OC formulations does not impact gender self-concept. Taken together, findings also highlight the specificity of exogenous ovarian hormone influences, as there are documented effects on cognition but not on personal characteristics, such as gender self-concept.

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