Birth control methods
Hello everyone,
When discussing birth control methods, there are so many birth control methods, and people choose which to use depending on the effectiveness of the birth control method. The effectiveness of birth control depends on how the person follows the instructions of use. A typical use of contraception is the ability to use contraception to prevent pregnancy without being monitored. In contrast, perfect use is the use of contraception correctly or even when being observed. There are many forms of birth control, and they include; pills, depo shot, IUD, implant, and the patch. Most effective ways of contraception that do not involve fluctuation in dependability when well-placed include those methods that include surgery, the IUD, implant, and the injection shots while the use of pills, condoms, and spermicides requires that the user follows the instructions well(Gupta,2016).
Many young women experience high risks of unwanted pregnancies because of not engaging in contraception or not correctly using them. Some of the factors that make women don’t use contraception are the side effects such as missing your cycles, access to the contraceptives, and even lack of partner’s approval. In cases of not using the contraception well, it’s seen in cases of using pills and condoms. For example when someone uses the everyday contraception pill, and she forgets to take the pill maybe because of being occupied and busy or even when the partner removes the condom before getting done with the sex and sometimes accidents that may occur when the condom breaks during the act affect the effective use of the contraception. To deal with these challenges, for example, using condoms as a contraceptive is being concentrative when using it and don’t rush when taken up with the moment, making it break or even remove it in the middle of the act. On using daily pills to avoid missing the pills, one can resolve using a perfect contraceptive, probably the one that does not need the user to follow the instructions.
References
Gupta, R. C. (2016). Birth Control Methods: How Well Do They Work? (for Teens) – Nemours Kids Health. Retrieved from https://kidshealth.org/en/teens/bc-chart.html