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contraceptive
(redirected from birth control device)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Acronyms, Encyclopedia 0.03 sec.

contraceptive

Any drug, device, or technique that prevents pregnancy. The contraceptive pill (the Pill) contains female hormones that interfere with egg production or the first stage of pregnancy. The ‘morning-after’ pill can be taken up to 72 hours after unprotected intercourse. Barrier contraceptives include condoms (sheaths), diaphragms, and sponges; they prevent the sperm entering the cervix (neck of the womb).

Intrauterine devices, also known as IUDs or coils, cause a slight inflammation of the lining of the womb; this prevents the fertilized egg from becoming implanted. See also family planning.

Other contraceptive methods include sterilization (women) and vasectomy (men); these are usually nonreversible. ‘Natural’ methods include withdrawal of the penis before ejaculation (coitus interruptus), and avoidance of intercourse at the time of ovulation (rhythm method). These methods are unreliable and normally only used on religious grounds. The use of any contraceptive (birth control) is part of family planning. The effectiveness of a contraceptive method is often given as a percentage. To say that a method has 95% effectiveness means that, on average, out of 100 healthy couples using that method for a year, 95 will not conceive.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Nearly two years after Wyeth pulled its implantable birth control device Norplant from the market amid concerns that some lots might not be effective, the pharmaceutical company has decided not to resume sales.
The data collected from the PPFA's clinical trials led the medical establishment to finally accept, and endorse as common medical practice, the dissemination of information on reproduction and birth control, as well as the prescription of birth control devices to all patients requiring them.
These students sought my help be cause, by this time, I had already been dubbed by the news media a "birth-control crusader" I had opened the nation's first abortion facility in 1964 and twice been imprisoned for teaching birth control and publicly showing birth control devices inside the twenty-five-foot, mobile classroom I took to the poor people of Long Island and New Jersey.
 
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