Contraception
Clinical Review
UPDATE ON CONTRACEPTION
Highlights (and lowlights) from the past year in contraception: the US unintended pregnancy rate and controversies in providing contraception.
Expert Commentary
Does long-acting reversible contraception prevent unintended pregnancy better than OCs, transdermal patch, and vaginal ring— regardless of a patient’s age?
News
Hormonal Contraception Raises Thrombotic Stroke, MI Risk
Major Finding: Women who used low-dose OCs (30-40 mcg estradiol) had a risk of arterial thrombosis that was 1.3-2.3 times higher than that in...
News
Implants, IUDs Top OCs, Patches, Rings at Preventing Pregnancy
Major Finding: Women using IUDs and subdermal implants had contraceptive failure rates of 0.3% at 1 year, 0.6% at 2 years, and 0.9% at 3 years.
Conference Coverage
Immediate Postpartum IUD Placement Prone to Expulsion
Major Finding: In all, 54% of 22 women receiving levonorgestrel-containing IUDs immediately after delivery had expelled the device, compared with...
Conference Coverage
Pregnancy, Contraception Data Highlighted in Epilepsy Registry
Conference Coverage
Weight a Factor in Risky Sexual Behaviors of Adolescent Females
Major Finding: Compared with their normal weight peers, overweight and obese adolescent females were more likely to have sexual intercourse before...
News
Physician Champions Credited With Increase in Postpartum Teen Contraception
Major Finding: Prenatal documentation of a plan for postpartum contraception was associated with greater use of long-acting reversible...
Conference Coverage
No Increased VTE Risk Found With NuvaRing
Major Finding: The 4-year risk of venous thromboembolism was 9 emboli/10,000 woman-years in patients on NuvaRing or combined oral contraceptives...
Conference Coverage
Physicians Underestimate Patient Pain from IUD Insertion
Major Finding: Patients rated their maximum pain during IUD insertion at 64 mm on a 100-mm visual analogue scale, compared with a rating by...
Conference Coverage
Investigational Contraceptive Patch Shows Promise
Major Finding: No clinically meaningful differences in contraceptive efficacy were observed between women who used an oral contraceptive and those...