Contraception: Your Questions Answered 7th edition

  • ISBN 9780702070006
  • Author: Guillebaud, John
  • Publ Date: 2017-08-31
  • Edition: 7
  • Binding: Paperback / softback

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This seventh edition has been completely revised and updated, incorporating relevant WHO and national guidance documents: therefore imparting best evidence-based practice for all methods.



Combined oral contraceptives (COCs) Based on the long-established evidence that 7 days of routinely not-taking pills in each cycle is too long for maintained ovarian suppression - and this necessarily leads to too little margin for errors in pill-taking - the authors recommend that providers switch to a new norm for all users of either:


Tricycling, the 84/4 regimen, or totally continuous use (365/365),
OR, for women who remain keen to see monthly pill-bleeds (which are completely unnecessary for health), one of the regimens (24/4 or 21/4) that shorten the contraception-non-taking time to 4 days

New methods, and their importance or otherwise:


Intrauterine system: Jaydess (R)
Subcutaneous, self-injectable alternative to Depo-Provera: Sayana (R) Press
24/4 combined hormonal contraceptives: Zoely (R), Eloine (R)
Diaphragm: Caya (R)

Updates


Quick starting and bridging (the Proving not Pregnant Protocol)
Emergency contraception (EC), how advice differs for ulipristal acetate EC
Drug metabolism (implications with norethisterone) and interactions (eg affecting lamotrigine)




Question and answer format
Important information boxes
Unwanted side effects boxes
Frequent patient questions at the end of relevant chapters
Management advice
Follow-up advice
Comes with free e-book on ExpertConsult for the first time

This seventh edition has been completely revised and updated, incorporating relevant WHO and national guidance documents: therefore imparting best evidence-based practice for all methods.



Combined oral contraceptives (COCs) Based on the long-established evidence that 7 days of routinely not-taking pills in each cycle is too long for maintained ovarian suppression - and this necessarily leads to too little margin for errors in pill-taking - the authors recommend that providers switch to a new norm for all users of either:


Tricycling, the 84/4 regimen, or totally continuous use (365/365),
OR, for women who remain keen to see monthly pill-bleeds (which are completely unnecessary for health), one of the regimens (24/4 or 21/4) that shorten the contraception-non-taking time to 4 days

New methods, and their importance or otherwise:


Intrauterine system: Jaydess (R)
Subcutaneous, self-injectable alternative to Depo-Provera: Sayana (R) Press
24/4 combined hormonal contraceptives: Zoely (R), Eloine (R)
Diaphragm: Caya (R)

Updates


Quick starting and bridging (the Proving not Pregnant Protocol)
Emergency contraception (EC), how advice differs for ulipristal acetate EC
Drug metabolism (implications with norethisterone) and interactions (eg affecting lamotrigine)




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