Margaret Sanger Biography

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Introduction that flows from the previous paragraph... something like: Through Sanger’s experiences of poverty and mother’s illness, both of which she believe to be due to excessive pregnancies and a large family, and being “burdened with guilt” over the death of Sadie Sachs (Croft, 2016), Sanger yearned for a way to prevent pregnancies and to create a method of contraception; fueled by this desire, Sanger not only assisted in fundamentally altering how American society and law viewed the idea of contraception, but she was also able to aid in the creation of pill form of birth control. (remake the introduction on Monday if the other paragraphs didn’t go over what you just said, or condense if it’s repeating too much). Sanger was an advocator …show more content…
Through these methods she was able to slowly sway the public opinion, and through her continued efforts she was able to gain FDA approval of the first pill form of birth control in 1960, and lived to see the Comstock Law abolished in 1965 (Margaret Sanger Biography.com, 2017).With it no longer being entirely on the onus on the man to consider contraception and potential pregnancies, and no longer was the law forbidding the use and discussion of birth control, women had gained a freedom they had been deprived of for so long. The effects of this caused a shift in how nurses approached the notion of sexual and reproductive health, for no longer was the discussion of birth control or sexual issues something to be ashamed of or discussed in secrecy; as a result, there are far greater resources in both sexual education and sexual