Seven tips for women on emergency contraception
1. Emergency contraception is only an emergency method, not a regular contraceptive measure. You should choose the contraceptive method that suits you correctly, and you should not rely on regular use of emergency contraceptive pills.
2. Emergency contraception should be used under the guidance of a doctor. Emergency contraceptive pills should be taken within 72 hours of sexual intercourse, as the failure rate is higher after 72 hours.
3. The effectiveness of emergency contraception is significantly lower than that of conventional contraceptive methods, and due to the high dosage (one dose of emergency contraception is generally equivalent to 8 days of conventional short-acting oral contraceptives) amount), the side effects are also significantly higher than those of conventional contraceptive pills, such as changes in menstrual cycles.
4. Excessive and frequent use of emergency contraceptive pills may cause damage to the body. Repeated use of emergency contraceptive pills can lead to menstrual disorders, bleeding or prolonged spotting, which will bring inconvenience to women's lives and work.
5. Medical emergency contraception can only be used for unprotected sex this time. Other reliable contraceptive measures should still be used during sex after taking the medicine in this cycle. If you are not careful, you may become pregnant in the same month you take the medicine.
6. Emergency contraception can only be used once in a menstrual cycle, as it will be ineffective the second time.
7. If emergency contraception fails and becomes pregnant, the incidence of neonatal malformations is high and the pregnancy must be terminated.
This article comes from adult.6kmall.com and is published by netizens. This site only quotes it for reference. It does not mean that this site agrees with the views of the article. If you believe that the content and intellectual property rights of this article infringe upon your interests, please contact us.