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Elon Musk says there’s ‘scientific consensus’ on birth control depression, suicide risk. He’s wrong.
If Your Time is short
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There is not scientific consensus that hormonal contraceptives, such as the pill and intrauterine devices, double the risk of depression and triple the risk of suicide. Tesla CEO Elon Musk based his claim on a single 2017 study that experts said is limited and does not prove a causal relationship.
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Medical experts and contraceptive researchers said there is mixed data on hormonal birth control’s side effects, including on depression, and that the overall risk of suicide is low. Research shows that most types of hormonal birth control do not affect weight.
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The claim ignores that many women use birth control to treat painful periods and other disorders, such as endometriosis and polycystic ovary syndrome, as well as the negative mental health outcomes that can arise from unplanned pregnancy.
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Learn more about PolitiFact’s fact-checking process and rating system.
Elon Musk says people in developed countries should have more babies. The Tesla CEO, who has fathered 11 children, is now warning women about what he says are birth control’s dangerous side effects.
"Hormonal birth control makes you fat, doubles risk of depression & triples risk of suicide," Musk wrote Feb. 16, on his platform, X. "This is the clear scientific consensus, but very few people seem to know it." To support his claim, Musk shared two links about a 2017 study from Denmark that said hormonal birth control could be linked to higher suicide risk.
But experts in reproductive health and contraception research criticized Musk’s conclusion, and said the single study, which has noted limitations, is far from "consensus."
Using hormonal contraception, such as birth control pills and intrauterine devices, can come with psychological side effects. But experts said that the overall risk of severe side effects is low. Musk’s post ignores that many women also take birth control to treat painful periods and health conditions, such as endometriosis and polycystic ovary syndrome.
The Denmark paper showed an increase in suicide risk in people who used hormonal contraception, "but in no way can it definitively claim the birth control was the cause; rather, it is a correlation," said Dr. Jennifer Lincoln, a board-certified OB-GYN and social media educator based in Portland, Oregon. "This study was a registry review, not a blinded randomized control trial, so this can only tell us association, which is interesting but in no way should broad sweeping conclusions a la Elon be made."
Registry studies use databases to evaluate specified outcomes in certain populations and are often considered observational.
We emailed the X press account for additional evidence and received an automatic reply: "Busy now, please check back later."
Hormonal contraception refers to birth control methods that contain estrogen and progesterone, or progesterone only, to prevent pregnancy. These methods can block the release of eggs from the ovaries, thin the uterus’s lining, or thicken mucus in the cervix to keep sperm from reaching the egg.
Hormonal birth control methods, which include the pill, ring, patch, shot, IUD (intrauterine device) and implant, are considered more effective — around 90% to 99% depending on correct and consistent usage — than almost all nonhormonal methods that prevent pregnancy without changing or affecting a person’s natural hormone production or period cycle. Nonhormonal methods include condoms, diaphragms and contraceptive gels.
Hormonal birth control, like many other medicines, has beneficial effects and potential risks that affect people differently. The most common side effects are nausea, headaches, breast tenderness and irregular periods. These usually subside, doctors say, within a few months once hormone levels balance out.
The 2017 study that Musk referred to was published in the American Journal of Psychiatry by researchers in Denmark who used a national registry that tracked women ages 15 and older who were living in the country from 1996 to 2013.
The paper analyzed prescriptions along with deaths and medical records with "suicide attempt" coding. It found that women who had used hormonal contraceptives had up to triple the risk of suicide as women who never took hormonal birth control. In a 2017 Time article that Musk linked, the researchers noted that the absolute risk of suicide "was still extremely low."
The study’s lead author, Charlotte Wessel Skovlund, told PolitiFact that Musk had a short post that sums up her findings in a "very unnuanced matter" but affirmed her studies found those risks for depression and suicide.
Skovlund said the studies were observational, and could, therefore, "only see if there is an association between hormonal contraception and the different depression parameters, not a causal link."
Other researchers and reproductive health experts said the results warrant further study but aren’t conclusive and don’t represent scientific consensus.
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"When looking directly at that data, we are talking about an extremely small number of people," said Dr. Michael Belmonte, an OB-GYN and complex family planning subspecialist based in Washington, D.C. The data shows that among the 475,802 women sampled, there were 6,999 suicide attempts (1.47%) and 71 suicides (0.01%). "While this study has found an association, it is unable to say that hormonal birth control is the cause," Belmonte said
The study focused solely on suicide and suicide attempts, not depression or weight gain. A separate study by the same authors found an increased prevalence of depression among hormonal birth control users. Belmonte said other studies that have examined this are mixed, "without consistent evidence of mood effects."
Two contemporaneous reports also cited the study’s limitations, including a November 2018 paper that Musk linked. The paper said the analysis lacked information on "risk factors" that may influence the relationship between contraception and suicidal behavior, such as relationship status, domestic abuse exposure and family history of mental health diagnoses.
In a July 2018 letter, biomedical experts in psychiatry and psychology noted other concerns. The suicide risk seemed to be higher for former hormonal birth control users, compared with recent or current users, they said, suggesting that "factors other than hormonal contraception medications are at work." The study also didn't specify which psychiatric diagnoses were controlled for, including substance use disorders and mood disorders.
The letter’s authors said the study doesn’t allow for attributing an association specifically to hormonal contraception because it didn’t compare hormonal birth control users with people who used nonhormonal methods. It cited a 2013 study that found a lower suicide risk among hormonal contraception users than for those using nonhormonal methods or no contraception.
Nearly all forms of birth control involving estrogen can increase the risk of serious health problems, but researchers and medical experts say risks are rare. Some research also suggests that birth control may increase the risk of some forms of cancer, while decreasing the risk of others.
Research shows the pill, patch, ring, and IUD are unlikely to cause any weight changes, while the birth control shot and implant may cause some people, but not all, to gain weight.
Dr. Jenni Villavicencio is an OB-GYN and senior director of public affairs at the Society of Family Planning, a nonprofit organization specializing in abortion and contraception science. She said decades of rigorous research show that "any method of birth control is safe for use in individuals with depressive disorder."
"It’s advisable for people experiencing mental health or mood challenges to seek care from an expert as well as ongoing monitoring when starting any new medication," Villavicencio said.
Besides preventing pregnancy, hormonal birth control can also offer different health benefits, such as lightening periods, easing cramps and treating polycystic ovary syndrome, or PCOS.
Lincoln, the Oregon-based OB-GYN, said the Denmark study didn’t address how many birth control users deal with painful and heavy periods, painful sex and other debilitating health issues.
"All things that alone can increase risk for undiagnosed mental health disorders and — you guessed it — suicide risk," she said.
The study’s researchers said women should be "informed" about these "little-recognized potential side effects." Lincoln said doctors routinely do this already, and discuss with patients concerns about depression, anxiety or thoughts of self-harm.
Musk said there is "clear scientific consensus" that hormonal birth control makes people gain weight and doubles the risk of depression and triples the risk of suicide.
Musk referred to a single 2017 study that experts said is limited and does not prove a causal relationship.
Research shows that most types of hormonal birth control do not affect weight, though some can. Medical experts and contraceptive researchers said there is mixed data on hormonal birth control’s side effects, including depression, and that the overall risk of suicide is low.
Musk’s claim ignores that many women use birth control to treat painful periods and other disorders, as well as the negative mental health outcomes that can arise from unplanned pregnancy.
We rate his claim False.
RELATED: More access to contraception increases abortion demand? No, that’s not right
Our Sources
X, Elon Musk post, Feb. 16, 2024
Time, Hormonal birth control is linked to a higher risk of suicide, study says, Nov. 21, 2017
PubMed, Hormonal contraception and suicide: a new dimension of risk, November 2018
The American Journal of Psychiatry, Letter to the Editor, Comment on the association of hormonal contraception with suicide attempts and suicides, July 2018
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Effectiveness of birth control methods, April 2023
Today.com, What’s the difference between natural and hormonal birth control? Experts explain, Oct. 25, 2022
The World Health Organization, Medical eligibility criteria for contraceptive use, Fifth edition 2015
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Summary of classifications for hormonal contraceptive methods and intrauterine devices, Reviewed March 27, 2023
JAMA Network, Association of hormonal contraceptive use with adverse health outcomes, 2022
National Cancer Institute, Oral contraceptives and cancer risk, Feb. 22, 2018
Healthline.com, The effects of hormonal birth control on your body, Aug. 8, 2018
Planned Parenthood, Is hormonal birth control bad for you?, March 13, 2023
WebMD, Birth control: the latest research, May 3, 2023
Email interview, Dr. Jennifer Lincoln, board-certified OB-GYN and social media educator, Feb. 20, 2024
Email interview, Dr. Daniel Grossman, professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of California, San Francisco, Feb. 20, 2024
Email interview, Rachel Kingery, spokesperson at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Feb. 21, 2024
Email interview, Charlotte Wessel Skovlund researcher and special consultant at the Danish Cancer Institute, Feb. 22, 2024
Email interview, Dr. Michael Belmonte, ACOG’s Darney-Landy Fellow, OB-GYN and complex family planning subspecialist, Feb. 21, 2024
Email interview, Dr. Jenni Villavicencio, an OB-GYN and senior director of public affairs at the Society of Family Planning, Feb. 21, 2024
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Elon Musk says there’s ‘scientific consensus’ on birth control depression, suicide risk. He’s wrong.
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