Barriers to the use of intrauterine devices among healthcare professionals: Evidence against misconceptions. [Barreras al uso de los dispositivos intrauterinos entre los profesionales sanitarios: evidencia frente a creencias erróneas.]
Author: Martínez, Francisca; Parra, Inmaculada; Andeyro, Mercedes; Cristóbal García, Ignacio; Quílez, José C.
Abstract: Long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) refers to highly effective methods that are suitable for most
women. Despite being the best known long-acting reversible contraception methods, the copper intrauterine
device (Cu-IUD) and the hormonal (levonorgestrel) device (LNG-IUD) are used by only 6.9% of women of
childbearing age in Spain who use any method of contraception. This may be a consequence of barriers to
the use of IUDs among health professionals that affect young and/or nulliparous women in particular. The
present review addresses available scientific evidence regarding the main factors creating barriers to the
use of intrauterine devices. These factors include possible difficulties during insertion and associated pain,
the risk of perforation during the insertion or of expulsion once inserted, the effects on dysmenorrhoea and
on menstrual bleeding pattern, the risk of ectopic pregnancy or of pelvic inflammatory disease, the speed
of recovery of fertility after removal, the impact of price, and the cost-benefit ratio of intrauterine devices.
It also addresses the barrier that results from possible rejection of intrauterine devices by women owing to
misconceptions.
Files in this item
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
14-RC-DIU_ING.pdf | 417.2Kb | View/ |
Collections
- MEDICINA [578]