Sexual Health
Women's safe period contraception is not safe. Doctors don't tell you contraceptive secrets
When it comes to contraceptive measures, doctors may not necessarily require you and your plate. Some important facts are not well-known to many women and cannot be fully taken seriously.
A public opinion survey was conducted on more than 2000 women, and 33% of them answered that the annual gynecological examination is just a scratch in the bucket. It is precisely the information you do not know that may lay hidden dangers and harm you. Among women who adopt contraceptive measures, two-thirds of them find themselves "accidentally" pregnant due to incorrect methods or improper coordination with their own lifestyle. In practical operation, contraceptive methods cannot achieve 100% safety or prevent sexually transmitted diseases, but the following 7 incomplete facts are likely to have a serious impact on your life.
Contraceptive Secrets Not Told by Doctors
Secret 1: Weight at Work
Women between the ages of 18 and 39 who weigh 58 kilograms or more are 60% more likely to fail oral contraceptives, especially those with low estrogen levels. Overweight women have a faster metabolism and require more hormones to prevent conception. In addition, birth control pills have the effect of dissolving fat and may stay in the body where fat is stored, unable to reach the blood that should be reached. If the weight exceeds 58 kilograms, please recommend more reliable methods such as intrauterine devices, birth control pills, and condoms.
Secret 2: Long lasting and most effective
In fact, the most effective contraceptive methods are unknown to you, never thought of, and no one has recommended them. Curious? The intrauterine device (IUD) is one of them. This is a small T-shaped contraceptive device placed in the uterus, made of soft plastic, and doctors must help insert it into the body. Afterwards, even if the egg is fertilized, it will not implant and grow in the uterus. If there are no abnormalities, it can be done for 1 or 2 years without causing any trouble for sex, which is very convenient.
Generally speaking, IUD today is quite secure, with only one brand named Dalksonshield having experienced deviation and disappearing since the 1970s, but it will somewhat affect IUD's reputation. Although it is already quite common in other countries, less than 1% of women choose to use it. This situation is not optimistic because for monogamous families, IUD may not guarantee that you will not be infected with sexually transmitted diseases, but it is indeed the most effective contraceptive measure. Once inserted, you can forget about its existence. Not only does it have no hormonal side effects that other contraceptive pills may bring, but it also has excellent effects - only a failure rate of 1% per year.