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Gregory
G. Pincus
By
creating the first practical oral contraceptive, the birth control
pill, in the 1950s, Gregory Pincus brought privacy and convenience
to women worldwide.
New
breakthroughs in birth control came in the early 1950s from Carl
Djerassi's successful synthesis of orally active analogues of
the female hormone progesterone. Sponsored by women's rights activist
Katharine McCormick, Pincus used the discoveries of Djerassi as
a blueprint for developing a practical oral contraceptive.
Pincus,
leading a team of researchers, generated a series of experiments
proving that progestin, a synthetic form of the female hormone
progesterone, prevented ovulation in animals. After they completed
successful testing on humans, the FDA approved the distribution
of Enovid®, the first birth control pill, in 1960.
The
cultural impact of the Pill is wide-reaching, allowing women the
liberty of choosing a method of birth control that can be administered
in the privacy of their own homes. The Pill is still commonly
used today with 98% effectiveness.
Pincus
was born in Woodbine, New Jersey, and studied biology at Cornell
and Harvard Universities, earning his Ph.D. at the latter in 1927.
Revered as the father of the Pill, Pincus was a pioneer in biotechnology.

Herman
A. Affel
Karl Bosch
Lloyd
Espenschied
Willard S.
Boyle
George E.
Smith
Vinton G. Cerf
Robert E. Kahn
Robert W. Gore
Fritz Haber
Richard M. Hoe
Benjamin Holt
Ali Javan
Dale Kleist
Robert S.
Langer, Jr.
Julio C.
Palmaz
Gregory G.
Pincus
Russell
Games Slayter
George E.
Smith
John H. Thomas
Elihu
Thomson
William Erastus
Upjohn
Granville
T. Woods
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