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Articles Tagged With: contraceptive

  • Contraceptive Access Issues Require a Different Kind of Understanding

    Contraceptive access initiatives often have focused on long-acting contraceptive methods, such as intrauterine devices and implants. These initiatives analyzed provider-level and financial access barriers to contraceptive methods. But this way of thinking has changed. Family planning experts now are examining access issues within a person-centered contraceptive care framework. This framework conceptualizes access according to what individual women want in contraceptives — not just around what they can afford and what is available.

  • Can We Liberalize Intrauterine Device Insertion Protocols?

    In this retrospective cohort study, the rate of luteal phase pregnancy was 0.4% among 239 women who did not meet pregnancy checklist criteria for intrauterine device insertion.

  • Long-Lasting, Woman-Controlled Contraception Is Here

    Annovera is designed for 21 days of continuous use, followed by a seven-day ring-free interval, during which the ring is removed, washed, and stored. Unlike other products, the same ring is used for subsequent cycles for an entire year (13 cycles total).

  • Intrauterine Device Use and Ovarian Cancer Risk

    In this systematic review, the odds ratio of ever-use of an intrauterine device and incident ovarian cancer was 0.68 (95% CI 0.62-0.75).

  • Revamping the Daily Pill: Research to Begin on Monthly Pill

    Although lowering side effects plays an important role in oral contraceptive compliance, one of the biggest challenges for patients is adhering to the daily schedule of the pill. Forgetting one to three pills per cycle is a frequent problem among 15-51% of users, particularly among adolescents. Lyndra Therapeutics has received a $13 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and is setting out to remove the daily pill compliance challenge. The company is in early development of a monthly oral contraceptive to provide women with a discreet, noninvasive, reversible contraception option.

  • Menstrual Cups: Risk for IUD Expulsion?

    In this case series from Colorado, seven women experienced IUD expulsion with menstrual cup removal.

  • Legislators, Listen Up, Learn, and Perhaps Beware

    Combined oral contraceptives have been shown to provide health benefits beyond birth control.

  • Researchers Investigate Contraceptive Vaginal Ring

    Scientists are now investigating a nonhormonal monthly ring (Ovaprene) as a potential contraceptive. The device involves a permeable mesh in the center of the ring that creates a partial barrier to sperm and locally acting spermiostatic agents to create an inhospitable environment for sperm.

  • LARC Contraceptives: Remove the Barriers

    Despite guidance stating that a patient should be offered the option to begin her chosen long-acting reversible contraception birth control method at the time of the office visit rather than waiting for her next period or returning for another appointment, just 29% of clinicians say they provide same-day placement.

  • Researchers Investigate Potential Male Contraceptives

    Early studies of a potential male contraceptive pill, which contains a modified testosterone that has the combined actions of an androgen and a progesterone, are underway. The experimental male oral contraceptive was the subject of a recent study to analyze its safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics.