Birth control, known as contraception, anticonception, and fertility control, is a method or device used to prevent pregnancy.
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Birth control, known as contraception, anticonception, and fertility control, is a method or device used to prevent pregnancy.
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Birth control has been used since ancient times, but effective and safe methods of birth control only became available in the 20th century.
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The term birth control is a bit of a misnomer since abortion is not regularly considered under the term.
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The most effective methods of birth control are sterilization by means of vasectomy in males and tubal ligation in females, intrauterine devices, and implantable birth control.
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Some methods of birth control can be started immediately following the birth, while others require a delay of up to six months.
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Birth control methods include barrier methods, hormonal birth control, intrauterine devices, sterilization, and behavioral methods.
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For example, two forms of birth control are recommended in those taking the anti-acne drug isotretinoin or anti-epileptic drugs like carbamazepine, due to the high risk of birth defects if taken during pregnancy.
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Birth control improves child survival in the developing world by lengthening the time between pregnancies.
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Part of the reason that many women are without birth control is that many countries limit access due to religious or political reasons, while another contributor is poverty.
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Birth control rejected the use of superstition and amulets and instead prescribed mechanical methods such as vaginal plugs and pessaries using wool as a base covered in oils or other gummy substances.
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Birth control movement developed during the 19th and early 20th centuries.
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Birth control's was mainly active in the United States but had gained an international reputation by the 1930s.
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Birth control's jumped bail in 1914 after her arrest for distributing birth control information and left the United States for the United Kingdom.
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Birth control's helped fund research Dr John Rock, and biologist Gregory Pincus that resulted in the first hormonal contraceptive pill, later called Enovid.
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The newly approved birth control method was not made available to the participants after the trials, and contraceptives are still not widely accessible in Puerto Rico.
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These organizations failed to enlist more than 100, 000 women because the use of birth control was often compared to eugenics; however, there were women seeking a community with like-minded women.
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The ideology that surrounded birth control started to gain traction during the Progressive Era due to voluntary associations establishing community.
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These include the requirement to create a national plan for family planning services, remove laws that limit access to family planning, ensure that a wide variety of safe and effective birth control methods are available including emergency contraceptives, make sure there are appropriately trained healthcare providers and facilities at an affordable price, and create a process to review the programs implemented.
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Free the Pill, a collaboration between Advocates for Youth and Ibis Reproductive Health are working to bring birth control over-the-counter, covered by insurance with no age-restriction throughout the United States.
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Improvements of existing birth control methods are needed, as around half of those who get pregnant unintentionally are using birth control at the time.
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Birth control is being considered as an alternative to hunting as a means of controlling overpopulation in wild animals.
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