Sexual Health
There are several methods that can be used for contraception. Six methods are not easy to try
If women have sex and are not prepared for the baby's money, they must take contraceptive measures. Cervical contraception, medication contraception, and other methods are available for everyone to choose from, but some couples who use irregular and dangerous contraception methods often cause women to unexpectedly conceive. It's best not to try these six methods of contraception!
Using lactation contraception
Non lactating mothers usually resume ovulation and menstruation after 4-6 weeks of delivery. Most lactating mothers do not menstruate. Some people believe that lactating mothers who do not menstruate will not ovulate and will not conceive.
Actually, this understanding is wrong. Breastfeeding mothers may resume ovulation even if they do not menstruate. If contraception is not used during this period, it is highly likely to cause the female partner to "secretly conceive". Therefore, lactating mothers should also use contraception.
Urinary contraception after sexual intercourse
Some people believe that after sexual intercourse, having the woman flush the vagina with urine can be used for contraception. This is a confused understanding. The female vagina and urethra are two different organs. After sexual intercourse, women cannot use urination to flush sperm from another channel out of the body.
Calculate the Calendar-based contraceptive methods for contraception
The so-called Calendar-based contraceptive methods refers to 7 days before menstruation and 8 days after menstruation. People also refer to it as the first seven and then eight. This period is not the ovulation period for women. At this time, couples in the same room will make women pregnant, so people call it the Calendar-based contraceptive methods. But the Calendar-based contraceptive methods is not absolutely safe.
Some women ovulate irregularly. Even if some women ovulate regularly, their emotions, living environment, and physical condition undergo significant changes, and ovulation will lose its original pattern. Therefore, it is not safe to use female contraception in the Calendar-based contraceptive methods.
Extracorporeal ejaculation contraception
Some people believe that if a man ejaculates outside the body during sexual intercourse, women will not become pregnant. This understanding is biased. Because, first of all, before the man ejaculates in vitro, a small amount of semen flows into the woman's vagina along with his prostatic fluid.
Secondly, if a man ejaculates outside the body too slowly, a portion of the semen will also enter the woman's vagina. This can lead to women becoming pregnant. Long term use of this method of contraception, couples in the same room is too nervous, prone to Neurasthenia, loss of libido and other diseases.