Free museum entry for New Zealanders and people living in New Zealand

Anovlar 21 contraceptive pill

Object | Part of History collection

item details

NameAnovlar 21 contraceptive pill
ProductionSchering AG; manufacturer(s); circa 1965; Germany
Classificationboxes, personalia
Materialspaper, cardboard, foil, plastic, hormone
DimensionsOverall: 173mm (width), 55mm (height), 15mm (depth)
Registration NumberGH022147
Credit lineGift of Dame Margaret Sparrow, 2011

Overview

Introduced in 1961, Anovlar was the first contraceptive pill to be used in New Zealand (it was also Europe’s first contraceptive pill, appearing on the West German market in 1961).

Described as a revolution, 'the Pill' changed attitudes towards contraception in society and transformed women's lives. New Zealand women were quick to take it, and became some of the highest users in the world. By the mid-1960s, the birth rate for married women began to decline. By 1974, half of all women of reproductive age were on the pill.

The pill combined oestrogen and progesterone, taken by mouth to inhibit fertility. Combined oral contraceptives were first approved for use in the United States in 1960, and became the most popular type of birth control.

The pill allowed women to control their fertility independently of intercourse and without internal manipulations by a doctor. It was a more predictable form of contraception that the previous barrier methods. However, initially only married women were prescribed it. The original intention of the pill was to help women space their families. Later, it was used to delay the timing of the first birth. By the late 1960s / early 1970s, as the reality of sexually active youth and changing social mores became more widely accepted, the pill was used by unmarried people to protect against unwanted pregnancies.