‘Father’ of birth control pill dies | Inquirer Technology

‘Father’ of birth control pill dies

/ 01:05 PM February 01, 2015

In this April 28, 2009 file photo, Carl Djerassi poses for a portrait at Jacobs University in Bremen, Germany. Djerassi, the chemist widely considered the father of the birth control pill, has died of complications of cancer in his San Francisco home, Stanford University spokesman Dan Stober said. He was 91. Djerassi, a professor emeritus of chemistry at Stanford, was most famous for leading a research team in Mexico City that in 1951 developed norethindrone, a synthetic molecule that became a key component of the first birth control pill. "The pill" as it came to be known radically transformed sexual practices and women's lives. (AP Photo/Joerg Sarbach, File)

In this April 28, 2009 file photo, Carl Djerassi poses for a portrait at Jacobs University in Bremen, Germany. Djerassi, the chemist widely considered the father of the birth control pill, has died of complications of cancer in his San Francisco home, Stanford University spokesman Dan Stober said. He was 91. Djerassi, a professor emeritus of chemistry at Stanford, was most famous for leading a research team in Mexico City that in 1951 developed norethindrone, a synthetic molecule that became a key component of the first birth control pill. “The pill” as it came to be known radically transformed sexual practices and women’s lives. (AP Photo/Joerg Sarbach, File)

SAN FRANCISCO, United States — Carl Djerassi, the chemist widely considered the father of the birth control pill, has died.

Stanford University spokesman Dan Stober said Djerrasi (jer-AH-see) died Friday of complications of cancer at his San Francisco home. He was 91.

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Djerassi was a professor emeritus at Stanford, but was most famous for leading a research team in Mexico City that in 1951 developed norethindrone, a synthetic molecule that became a key component of the first birth control pill.

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“The pill” as it came to be known radically transformed sexual practices and women’s lives.

In his book, “This Man’s Pill,” Djerassi said the invention also changed his life, making him more interested in how science affects society.

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Later in life, Djerassi wrote poems, short stories and plays.

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TOPICS: birth control, pill, Reproductive Health
TAGS: birth control, pill, Reproductive Health

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