If you'd like more information about contraceptives and their uses, contact Planned Parenthood, where a clinician can provide you with more information about birth control pills and
other contraceptive choices.
Planned Parenthood can provide you with more information about birth control pills and
other contraceptive choices.
Not exact matches
I am happy that the writer had the
choices that she did... She is also free to decide whether or not she is a Catholic... She however, took an available medication for a health problem... most Catholic facilities recognize such health problems and allow for that treatment... I am completly puzzled, though, that she would not want
other Catholics to be able to choose differently than she did... for those people who wish to use
contraceptive services and medication, options are open to them... I am not Catholic, did not grow up in a faith based family, and don't know whether a God exists or not... However, to leave a relgious group with no option but to contradict its own tenets is an attempt by those who don't believe in those tenents to mock them, certainly, but more to erode them... this seems the aim of many and when those folks operate from inside the government... that intrusion is an overreach of the govenrment...
Other forms of birth control that can be used include abstinence, and even some hormonal
contraceptive methods, although they are not often considered the first
choice for breastfeeding mothers.
Working together, the global community and national public, private, and civil society partners must ensure that LARCs are fully available alongside
other contraceptive methods so that universal access is achieved through informed
choice, voluntarism, and equity.
Although Plan B and
other ECPs are part of the
contraceptive choices women need to have on hand to make their reproductive decisions, they do not replace
other more consistent forms of birth control.
The Pill and
other contraceptive methods that alter a woman's natural hormonal cycles may also alter their
choice of partners and possibly their reproductive success, according to a new review of studies on the issue published in the October issue of the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution.