Contraception |
Condom; Condoms |
For other uses, see Birth control (disambiguation). Birth control is a regimen of one or more actions, devices, or medications followed in order to deliberately prevent or reduce the likelihood of a woman giving birth or becoming pregnant. Methods and intentions typically termed birth control may be considered a pivotal ingredient to family planning. Mechanisms which are intended to reduce the likelihood of the fertilisation of an ovum by a spermatozoon may more specifically be referred ...
Wikipedia - [full article]
Resources
- All About Tubal Sterilization (Planned Parenthood Federation of America)
- Anticonceptivos Orales Combinados FAQ (Family Health International)
- ¿Que Tipo de Control de La Natalidad Es Mejor Para Usted? (Office for Protection from Research Risks, OD, NIH, HHS)
- Beginning Too Soon: Adolescent Sexual Behavior, Pregnancy and Parenthood: A Review of Research and Interventions (Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), OS, HHS)
- Birth Control for Women with Epilepsy (Epilepsy Foundation, The)
- Birth Control Guide (Office of Consumer Affairs, OEA, FDA,)
- Birth Control Options (Cleveland Clinic)
- Birth Control--The Pill (Cleveland Clinic)
- Birth Control: Comparing the Choice (Association of Reproductive Health Professionals)
- Condones FAQ. (Family Health International)
- Contraception (National Women's Health Information Center)
- Contraception (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
- Contraception (Cleveland Clinic)
- Contraception Myths (Cleveland Clinic)
- Copper T Intrauterine Device, The (Emory University)
- Depo-Provera (Cleveland Clinic)
- Depo-Provera: An Injectable Contraception (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- Diafragma FAQ (Family Health International)
- Diaphragm FAQ (Family Health International)
- Drospirenone and Ethinyl Estradiol (National Library of Medicine, NIH, HHS)
- Emergency Contraception (National Women's Health Information Center)
- Endocrinology and Contraception (Hormone Foundation)
- Estrogen and Progestin (National Library of Medicine, NIH, HHS)
- Facts About Birth Control (Planned Parenthood Federation of America)
- FDA Approves First Hormonal Vaginal Contraceptive Ring (Food and Drug Administration, HHS)
- Foams and Condoms (Cleveland Clinic)
- Frequently Asked Questions - Birth Control Methods (National Women's Health Information Center)
- Frequently Asked Questions About the Contraceptive Patch (Association of Reproductive Health Professionals)
- Frequently Asked Questions about the Female Condom (Global Campaign for Microbicides)
- Frequently Asked Questions on Contraception (Family Health International)
- How do HIV, STD and Unintended Pregancy Prevention Work Together? (CDC National Prevention Information Network)
- Intrauterine Device - ACOG Publication #AP014 (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) Resource Center)
- Intrauterine Device, The (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- Is Depo-Provera For You? (Planned Parenthood Federation of America)
- Las píldoras anticonceptivas y el riesgo de cáncer
- Levonorgestrel Intrauterine Device (Emory University)
- Lo Que Debes Saber Sobre: Depo-Provera (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Lo Que Debes Saber Sobre: El Condón Masculino (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Lo Que Debes Saber Sobre: La Abstinencia (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Lo Que Debes Saber Sobre: La Píldora (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Male Condom FAQ (Family Health International)
- Métodos de Planificación Familiar Natural FAQ (Family Health International)
- Mechanisms of the Contraception Action of Hormonal Methods and Intrauterine Devices (Family Health International)
- Medical Uses of the Oral Contraceptive Pill: A Guide for Teens (Center for Young Women's Health)
- Natural Family Planning (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- Natural Methods of Family Planning FAQ (Family Health International)
- No Scalpel Vasectomy (Digital Urology Journal)
- Norelgestromin and Ethinyl Estradiol Transdermal System (National Library of Medicine Office of Public Information)
- Norplant Birth Control: Questions and Answers (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- On the Teen Scene: Preventing STDs (U.S. Food and Drug Administration)
- Oral Contraceptives and Cancer Risk
- Oral Contraceptives FAQ (Fronske Health Center, Northern Arizona University)
- Ortho Evra Consumer Information (U.S. Food and Drug Administration)
- Overcoming Infertility (Office of Consumer Affairs, OEA, FDA,)
- Patterns of Condom Use Among Adolescents: The Impact of Mother-Adolescent Communication (National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention)
- Preguntas frecuentes - Métodos anticonceptivos (National Women's Health Information Center)
- Progestasert Intrauterine Device (Emory University)
- Questions & Answers About Birth Control Shots (Association of Reproductive Health Professionals)
- Sólo Para Jóvenes: Lo Que Debes Saber Sobre La Anticoncepción (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Sterilization as Permanent Birth Control (Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research)
- Teen Talk, Vol. III: What You Should Know About Contraception (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Trends in Sexual Risk Behaviors Among High School Students - United States, 1991-1997 (National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention)
- Vaginal Spermicides (Fronske Health Center, Northern Arizona University)
- Vasectomía Sin Escalpelo (Digital Urology Journal)
- Vasectomy Safety (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development)
- Very-Low-Dose Birth Control Pills for Perimenopausal Women (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- What Kind of Birth Control Is Good for You? (Food and Drug Administration, HHS)
- What You Should know About: Abstinence (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- What you Should Know About: Depo-Provera (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- What You Should Know About: The Male Condom (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- What You Should Know About: The Pill (Office of Population Affairs Clearinghouse, OPA, OPHS, OS, HHS)
- Yasmin (CenterWatch: Clinical Trials Listing Service)
- Your Contraceptive Choices (Planned Parenthood Federation of America)

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