Search for tag: "family planning"
Family Planning Options OverviewModern contraception allows men and women to have… +5 More
June 27, 2022
Family Health and Wellness
Womens Health
A baby that is wanted and planned for, a child by choice and not by chance, that is what modern contraception offers men and women. But you have to know what's out there, how it works, and where to get it. This is really important now more than ever.
This is Dr. Kirtly Jones from Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Utah Health, and this is the "7 Domains of Women's Health" on The Scope.
Women and men all over the world have wanted to plan their families for thousands and thousands of years, but methods used in Cleopatra's time in ancient Egypt probably weren't as effective as what is available now. If no method of contraception is used, women in sexual relationships that would make them pregnant could expect to have more than 11 babies. That's in these days of good obstetrical and pediatric care, where women are less likely to die in childbirth and babies are much less likely to die in the first five years of life. Eleven babies sound like too much? One more baby sounds like too much right now?
Let's talk about contraception. It's an egg and a sperm problem. You need to stop egg production, stop sperm production, or stop the sperm from getting to the eggs. These are the main ways that modern contraception works.
About 50% of unplanned pregnancies happen to people who are "using" contraception but using it incorrectly. This is the most common reason that methods like abstinence or periodic abstinence, think natural family planning, or methods like barrier methods like condoms or diaphragms actually fail. They weren't used correctly or at all. Methods that you have to think about at the time of sex are more likely to fail because you're more likely to fail to use them. If you combine two methods, abstain during your fertile period and use condoms all the rest of the time, your chance of getting pregnant by accident is much lower. Two methods are better than one, and this is a combo where men can be the important user. You can get condoms most anywhere, and anyone with some smarts and gumption can figure out their fertile period.
So let's talk about hormonal pills, patches, and rings. They are considered moderately effective methods or ones that have an annual failure rate between 1 in 10 to 1 in 100. That means if women use them, the chance of getting pregnant is about 1 in 10 to 1 in 100 per year. Of course, you might be at risk for pregnancy for multiple years, so these chances literally add up. Considering a lifetime of contraception using these methods, it was calculated that women would have about two unplanned pregnancies. These methods work by blocking ovulation and by changing cervical mucus so sperm cannot get to the eggs, but women don't always take the pills, or patches or rings correctly. They miss some days or they stop for a week as directed, but they stop for longer than seven days, and they are very likely to ovulate. But you could team up with your sex partner and use a moderately effective method and condoms and get much more bang for your buck birth control-wise.
Hormonal methods aren't right for everyone, and you should know by reading up or asking knowledgeable clinicians if they're right for you. Now, there may be immense hormonal contraception on the horizon, transdermal hormones to block sperm production. If it has about a 10% failure rate per year, and women taking the pill as they will, not perfectly, have a failure rate of about 10% per year, if both members of the sexually active couple use the method not perfectly, the failure rate would be about 1 in 100 per year. The two methods multiply in terms of their effectiveness. If they both used effectively, if they both, men and women used hormonal methods effectively, it would be about 1 in 10,000 women per year, and that is effective contraception.
Now for highly effective methods, these methods have failure rates of about 1 per 1,000 women per year. They are so good because you don't have to think about them and using them correctly almost always happens. These include copper IUDs, hormonal IUDs, and hormonal implants under the skin. The hormonal implants' primary method of action is to work by blocking ovulation. The IUDs' primary method of action is by blocking sperm. Copper in the copper IUD kills sperm on their way up to the egg, and the hormonal IUD blocks sperm from getting through the cervix. The IUDs and implants are highly successful at preventing pregnancy but require a trained clinician to put them in. They last a long time, the copper IUD for 12 years, the hormonal IUD for 5, and the implant for 3, but they are immediately reversible as soon as they come out.
Now, all contraceptive methods have some side effects and risks, but none have as many risks and side effects as an unwanted pregnancy. Uh-oh, did you just say, "Oops?" Did you forget to take your pills? Did the condom slip off or stay in his back pocket? Was sex forced on you and you weren't using anything? Emergency contraception is for people who had unprotected or under-protected sex. They are pills over the counter or by prescription, that must be used in the first three to five days after the unprotected sex act, and the earlier, meaning the next day or the day after, the better. The copper IUD and hormonal IUD can also be used for emergency contraception, but they aren't FDA approved for that use, and you have to find a clinician to place one in a timely manner.
Using contraception means some work on your part. You have to know what you can use and want to use. You need to know where you can get them. You need to know how you can pay for them. All this information is available from many sources, but an overall good resource is bedsider.org. Many clinics around the country provide contraception on a sliding fee scale based on the ability to pay. Most insurance plans pay for a significant amount of the cost of contraception. There's a national family planning grant called Title X, that provides low-cost contraception to anyone who needs it, and it's available in most states. But you have to lace up your boots or put on your flip-flops and do it. Children deserve to be by choice and not by chance now more than ever. Thanks for joining us on The Scope.
Modern contraception allows men and women to have a child by choice, not by chance. But what family planning options are available? And how effective are they? Learn the most common contraceptives available and how to choose the best one for you and your family. |
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94: Contraceptive Gel for MenMen don't have many birth control options,… +4 More
February 01, 2022
The clinical trial is looking for participants in Utah and elsewhere. Find out if you qualify for the study by clicking here.
This content was originally created for audio. Some elements such as tone, sound effects, and music can be hard to translate to text. As such, the following is a summary of the episode and has been edited for clarity. For the full experience, we encourage you to subscribe and listen— it's more fun that way.
Scot: Who has a dog?
Troy: Sorry.
Scot: Was that yours? Was that Charlotte?
Troy: That was Charlotte. If I didn't let her in the room, she would be scratching at the door. So that's where we are.
Scot: Today on "Who Cares About Men's Health," we're going to learn more about a new male contraceptive. It's a gel. It's in clinical trial, but you're going to learn more about the contraceptive. You'll also learn how you can participate in the clinical trial if you wanted to.
This is "Who Cares About Men's Health." My name is Scot Singpiel I bring the BS. Bringing the MD to the table is Dr. Troy Madsen.
Troy: Hey, Scot.
Scot: And our guest today is Dr. David Turok. He is an OB-GYN and also a family practice physician. He is interested in family planning, and he is . . . Are you running this clinical trial? How are you involved exactly?
Dr. Turok: Yeah. I am the site lead for the Utah site, and there are 10 other sites.
Scot: All right. So, Dr. Turok, tell me about this male contraceptive gel that you're running the clinical trials on. What do we need to know?
Dr. Turok: So this is an awesome opportunity for our team and for men in Utah to make a real contribution to increasing the range of contraceptive methods that are available for people. So this is the first study that's been available for people in Utah for a male hormonal method. And this study is looking at a gel that will be applied daily on the shoulders. Literally, this study rests on the shoulders of male participants.
Scot: And what's in the gel? What's going on here?
Dr. Turok: So it's a combination of progestin or progestogen called nestorone and testosterone. And the way this stuff works is very similar to the way the birth control pill or the patch or the ring work in female contraception. Basically, this outside hormone tricks your brain into not producing the sex hormones. In women, it prevents ovulation, and in men, it prevents sperm production. It also prevents testosterone production, and that's why the gel also has some testosterone as add-back.
Troy: Interesting. So it's going to actually maybe drop your body's production of testosterone, but not necessarily affect your body's level of testosterone?
Dr. Turok: Correct. That's the goal.
Scot: Yeah. Okay. Explain that. I'm not buying into this quite yet. What did you just say, Troy?
Troy: I'll let David explain it. I'm guessing.
Scot: I would think a lot of men would be like, "Oh, I don't know about putting something on that's going to decrease my body's level of testosterone." That didn't sound like a great idea.
Dr. Turok: Right. For decades, we've been willing to have millions and millions of women across the globe use methods that interfere with their normal hormonal cycle in ways that are safe and effective. And this is similar to that.
So the bottom line on this is there's messaging from the brain at two levels in the brain for gonadotropin-releasing hormone, and then for FSH and LH in the pituitary. And those sex hormones trigger the production . . . There are two groups of cells in the testes that are affected by those. And getting these hormones from the outside, as application of the gel will produce, essentially deactivates one group of cells that makes sperm and the other group of cells that makes testosterone among other things.
And at that point, in order to avoid side effects that people would not like, the testosterone in the gel essentially adds back what you need.
Scot: Obviously, I'm the one without the MD, so you're going to have to explain this to me a couple of times. But we've done previous shows where we've talked about men who take testosterone, and it can cause side effects like testicle shrinkage and other sorts of things. What is preventing this from causing those types of side effects of taking artificial testosterone?
Dr. Turok: First of all, it's dosing. There likely will be some decrease in the size of the testicles. Not as much as people who are using high levels, for example, of injectable testosterone. And the other side effects are . . . There are some minor cholesterol changes with decreases in HDL. There's maybe a slight bump that can happen with hematocrit, the amount of red blood cells that you have circulating in your body. And the progestogen, the nestorone, can also cause a slight increase in weight.
There are very few things that are side-effect-free. But the vast majority of people who have used this combination and others like it have had very few side effects.
So, in the last large study of a combination of an injectable progestin and testosterone combination, there were fewer than 10% of people who quit the trial because of side effects. And if you compare that to studies of oral contraceptive pills in females, that's actually quite favorable. So I think we're seeing something that's headed in the right direction.
And again, we can only get the answers for newer and better methods if people are willing to participate in trials like this. And this is not just, "Hey, here's something you can try and tell us how you like it." This is a rigorously designed study that's going to have up to 400 couples in it. Everyone is going to get the same evaluation. It's going to be extremely thorough, looking at those outcomes that we talked about, pregnancy and side effects, as well as blood tests with chemistry and looking at people's blood levels of the drugs, of the hormones, of their red blood cell counts.
We're going to have enough people to really evaluate this to see if this is truly safe and effective. And the early signals are from this study and others like it that they are very favorable.
Troy: That's great. And for anyone who's listening who wants to participate, what kind of benefits . . . Obviously, a huge benefit is just contributing to science, which I'm sure you and I would agree is a great benefit. I don't know if Scot would agree.
Scot: Yeah. How much am I going to get paid?
Troy: Scot, that's what we're getting at. Is there any financial . . . Scot is like, "Where's the money? Show me the money." Is there a financial incentive to participating or any other benefits?
Dr. Turok: This is not a casual study. The demands of participants are significant and people are compensated for their time and effort and, I think, in a reasonable and generous way. But the combination reimbursement, if you go through the full trial for a couple, is over $3,000.
Scot: Is another prerequisite for the couples you're looking for couples that are open to if it doesn't work that they were planning on having children anyway? Because you're using a trial for a birth control method that you're not exactly sure of the efficacy yet. They could end up becoming pregnant, right?
Dr. Turok: That is an absolute risk. And people who are entering the study need to be willing to accept that. This is something where there's going to be very close observation. So we're going to be checking people's sperm counts regularly, every month throughout the study.
In normal use, something like that wouldn't happen. But this is something where if there ever was a problem or somebody had initially had a low sperm count and then it came back up, we would be able to identify that and ideally intervene before there was a risk of pregnancy.
And again, that coupled with the inherent relatively low risk of pregnancy makes this a safe and reasonable thing.
Scot: Is there a minimum amount of sexual intimacy? Is there a minimum amount of sex that you have to have while you're in this study?
Dr. Turok: Yeah.
Troy: Is this an additional incentive? Is that what you're trying to get at, Scot?
Scot: Maybe. I don't know.
Troy: Like, "Well, we've got to have sex at least three times a week."
Scot: "The study says so."
Troy: "The study says. This is for science."
Dr. Turok: Yeah, that is for couples to determine. But the minimum, the only requirement . . . And this is true for all contraceptive efficacy studies, not particular to this. But couples have to have at least one episode of intercourse where they're relying only on this method each month for that month to count in the efficacy data. So that's true whether we're studying an IUD or a pill or a new injection or the ring, anything.
Troy: And so hearing this, maybe someone is listening and thinking, "Well, I don't know that I want to be part of a study. I don't know that I would qualify. I don't know that I have the time to do this." But maybe they're thinking, "This sounds really cool." What do you think longer, bigger picture, if this next phase is successful, before this actually becomes a realistic option for men to use? Would you say realistically five years out before you think this would potentially be available by prescription?
Dr. Turok: Five years would be greased lightning.
Troy: So that would be a very optimistic scenario?
Dr. Turok: Yeah. In 2007, I wrote this paper that was a summary. It was called "The Quest for Better Contraception: Future Methods." And I was a young contraceptive researcher at the time and really wanted to do a landscape analysis of all the methods that were out there. And there was a section in that paper on male hormonal methods. 2007. And at the time, for that and several other things, we were like, "Yes, we're 5, maybe 10 years away." And we're still 5 or 10 years away, but we've made significant progress.
All of these things take time because the FDA wants to assure that these are truly safe and there are not going to be harms associated with newly approved medications. This certainly seems like it's on track and has great potential to deliver a safe and effective method over time that will be reversible.
And that's another aspect of the study, looking at what happens when you stop it. How long does it take for sperm counts to come back? And that hasn't been an issue in any of the male hormonal contraceptive studies. Nearly all the participants have had return to normal fertility.
Troy: So it's a ways out. If there's a guy now who's 20, maybe by the time he's 30, he could look at using this.
Scot: Well, sounds more like if there's a guy that's 20, maybe his son will be able to use it.
Dr. Turok: No, no, no.
Troy: I didn't want to go that far with it.
Scot: Troy, we're running out of time here. Do you have any final questions?
Troy: Yeah. Have you talked to anyone who's used this? And if so, what do they say about it? Do they like it? Do they find it's fairly convenient? Any personal feedback you've gotten from any participants?
Dr. Turok: Yeah. So the feedback from some other people who've participated at other sites has been extremely favorable and people have been very satisfied. The gel is easy to use. It's easy to apply. The desired results are delivered, and actually, the decrease in sperm counts is occurring a little bit faster than anticipated, which is great, but still takes two to three months. And the initial efficacy signal has been really good.
So the participants have really done a great job and have had very few concerns and negative aspects of feedback thus far, which is great.
Scot: Cool. We'll put the link to your survey site on our website. Thank you very much, Dr. Turok, and thanks for caring about men's health.
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Can a Vasectomy Be Reversed?A vasectomy is often considered a form of… +5 More
August 18, 2021
Mens Health
Interviewer: Here to speak with us about vasectomy reversal is Dr. James Hotaling, a urologist and the director of the men's health program here at University of Utah Health. Now, Dr. Hotaling, when it comes to a procedure like this, what are some of the reasons a patient might be looking for a reversal?
Dr. Hotaling: About 6% of people who have a vasectomy will ultimately want it reversed. The most common reason is that they have gotten divorced and have a different partner and want kids with that new partner. Although we do see couples who have had kids, had a vasectomy and then decided they want more kids. So those are usually the most common reasons people want it reversed.
Interviewer: I've been seeing some rates that say, "Hey, you know, a reversal is only 30% to 90% effective." How effective is a procedure like this?
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. It works about a 90% to 95% of the time.
Interviewer: Oh, wow.
Dr. Hotaling: So it's pretty effective. It depends a little bit on how far out you are from your vasectomy. If you're like 20 years out, it has a lower chance of success. Although it, you know, that chances of success still may be like 80%, 85% than if you're two years out, just because there's more scar tissue.
Interviewer: And we're determining success by being the ability to get pregnant.
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. That's exactly right. You're determining success by having swimming sperm in the ejaculate.
Interviewer: And so what other factors besides just length of time since you've had the procedure?
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. A little bit it can be exactly how the procedure was done. When you go back in there, you can either put the vas deferens back to the vas deferens, and that has the highest chance of success rate. Sometimes you have to put the vas deferens back to the epididymis or the sperm-holding tank, and that's smaller and that has like a 60% to 70% chance of success. It's lower. But if you can put the vas deferens back to the vas deferens, that success rate is really high. So if you look at all comers, you end up around 90% to 95%. That's really the biggest thing in determining the success rate and then also just, like we mentioned, how far out you are from having the reversal and to some degree just how the individual surgeon did the vasectomy.
Interviewer: If someone say listening to this and considering whether or not they should have their vasectomy reversed, what is, you know, what is the ideal candidate for a procedure like this? Like is anyone say, you know, not a good candidate? What makes a good person for this?
Dr. Hotaling: That's another really good question. So obviously somebody who wants to have kids in the future and somebody who if the wife is younger, that can be helpful, although it's not impossible to do it if their wife is older. Also for couples who want, you know, multiple kids, it can be helpful as well. And just cost considerations. You know, the cost of a vasectomy reversal is a lot less expensive than the cost of in vitro fertilization. It's like a third the price. So that's kind of the other option, the other consideration.
Interviewer: And is reversal ever covered by insurance?
Dr. Hotaling: No.
Interviewer: Okay. So it's out of pocket?
Dr. Hotaling: It's always out of pocket. Yeah.
Interviewer: What are some of the risks with getting this type of procedure, of getting it all back together?
Dr. Hotaling: Well, the biggest risk would be that it wouldn't work, which is really, really low. You know, the recovery is usually pretty minimal, a little bit of bruising, but not terrible, sore for, you know, maybe five days afterwards. We do use long-acting numbing medication that lasts for four days. So patients really don't have much pain from that. And then you have to take it easy for three weeks or so. In terms of the complication, some patients can get pain that lasts longer than that afterwards. As I mentioned, the chance that it couldn't work or just chance of some bruising or a very rare chance of infection, although that is exceptionally, exceptionally rare as in I've been doing this for eight years and I've only ever seen it happen once.
Interviewer: Wow.
Dr. Hotaling: So that's not common.
Interviewer: Okay. So here on The Scope we've talked before about vasectomies and what the procedure is like, what to expect. It's an outpatient procedure, you come on in and, you know, you heal up for a week or so, right? With a reversal, you know, like the day of the surgery, what are they expecting?
Dr. Hotaling: So they'll, you know, they won't have anything to eat or drink after midnight. They'll come in, in the morning. You know, they'll get an IV put in. They'll get drifted off to sleep. They'll go to sleep. Once they're asleep, we make two small incisions, one on either side of the scrotum, and then we go in and find where the blockage and we bring a high powered . . . we have this new digital microscope, it's like a $700,000 microscope that actually allows us to see in 3D with special glasses on.
Interviewer: Wow.
Dr. Hotaling: It actually is really helpful to do the procedure. So we bring that in. Then we put the tubes back together again with 12 sutures that are finer than a human hair and then put the local numbing medication and close everything up. Each incision is shorter than an inch on either side.
Interviewer: Oh, wow.
Dr. Hotaling: So two incisions, really small. Then you would wake up with some . . . And all the stitches melt away on their own. You'd wake up with some sort of biologic superglue over the incisions and then some gauze on the scrotum. And then you'd go home later that day. And most patients just take some Ibuprofen and Tylenol and that's it.
Interviewer: Wow. And you were saying that it's take it easy for a little bit and then three weeks until you're back to . . .
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. It's really just no like sex, bike riding, or heavy lifting for three weeks. But you could be back on your computer doing work the next day. Often if I do the surgery on a Thursday, patients are back at work again certainly by Monday. And if I did the surgery on say a Tuesday, often by Thursday or Friday.
Interviewer: Once they're all healed up and once they're feeling good, how do we know, I guess, if it was a success?
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. It's a great question. You know, we have had patients who get pregnant before we ever checked the first semen analysis.
Interviewer: Wow.
Dr. Hotaling: But usually we check in like 8 to 10 weeks, we check the sperm test. And it can take up to a year, even up to a year and a half, depending on the type of like reconstruction that we do.
Interviewer: Oh, wow. So it's not just you magically are?
Dr. Hotaling: Most patients, when it's successful, have sperm right away.
Interviewer: Oh, wow.
Dr. Hotaling: But it can take longer.
Interviewer: Okay. So, you know, you'll do a test and find out if it was successful and go on from there?
Dr. Hotaling: And then we would repeat it again in three to six months if we didn't show any sperm.
Interviewer: And I would imagine that this type of procedure is something you want to make sure you go to a good doctor, a good surgeon, or a good urologist. You know, what should a man be looking for in a doctor to perform this?
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. So typically somebody who's done a fellowship in male infertility, which both myself and Dr. Gross here have. We're actually getting another partner, who's starting in September, who's also done a fellowship in male infertility. So you want someone who's fellowship trained. You want someone who does a lot of these. And I think also doing it, you know, in the operating room with the patient asleep, with kind of the best equipment you have, and we sort of tick all those boxes here. Some people do do them in the office with local numbing medication. You know, I don't believe that that's necessarily the best way to do it in my opinion.
Interviewer: So we're looking for someone with a fellowship, someone who's performed the procedure a few times and probably a lot of times, right? And a good center, right?
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. That's exactly right.
Interviewer: For a patient who is considering getting this procedure done, what is it about say University of Utah Health or maybe another medical center? What is the things that a big center like ours can offer to them with their procedure?
Dr. Hotaling: Yeah. Typically we can also . . . we offer the ability, because we have a full IVF lab and andrology or sperm lab, we can do a little biopsy of the testis at the same time and freeze some of that testicular tissue in case the reversal doesn't work, you know, and you could use that, which saves the patient a significant amount of money because they don't have to have another procedure in case it doesn't work. You want somewhere, you know, that does a lot of them and really has the best equipment.
Interviewer: You were just telling me that you have fellows, you have other . . .
Dr. Hotaling: Mm-hmm. We have other people that we work with. And the surgeons here are still doing the entire surgery, but we have really good assistants. A lot of places, it may be, you know, a surgical technician who's assisting the surgeon, and it really helps to have, you know, great assistants, or if it's a super complicated case, myself and my partner, you know, we'll sometimes do those together.
A vasectomy is often considered a form of permanent sterilization, but as many as ten percent of men report wanting more kids after they’ve had the procedure. For those patients, a highly effective surgical option can help them become fertile again. Learn the ins and outs of vasectomy reversal and if it is right for you. |
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Birth Control Options for University StudentsLess than half of high schools in the United… +4 More
March 28, 2019
Family Health and Wellness
Mens Health
Womens Health
Dr. Jones: I was talking to a group of 11 college students, all women, about family planning. They said, "We aren't really interested in family planning because we aren't planning any children right now." Really? What am I not getting here?
Announcer: Covering all aspects of women's health, this is "The Seven Domains of Women's Health" with Dr. Kirtly Jones on The Scope.
Dr. Jones: Sometimes you think people you are talking to know what you mean. Well, that's a mistake for sure. I make assumptions that young people in college know how their bodies work and about contraception, but maybe I'm wrong.
Today in The Scope studio we're talking to Grace Mason, a college student who knows a lot about contraception and is learning a lot about what her fellow students know and don't know. She is the founder and President of the Campus Contraceptive Initiative here at the University of Utah. Welcome, Grace.
Grace: Thanks for having me.
Dr. Jones: So, Grace, by the time young people get to college with all that's out there on the internet, they're pretty well-informed about contraception. Right?
Grace: Well, you would hope so, but unfortunately since less than half of the United States mandates contraceptive education and sexual education broadly, a lot of students come into college without having any sex ed. And a lot of students don't experience medically accurate sex ed in that regard. So if they come out, they may come out of high school with misinformation.
And so when we hope that students will turn to the internet to get better information, there's also a lot of misinformation on the internet that they're quite easy to find as many different people will tell teenagers what they should believe about sex ed rather than what their bodies do and how their bodies function.
So I think that students frequently come in believing things or not knowing anything and hoping that anyone will tell them the truth about how their bodies work.
Dr. Jones: Well, there's a lot of sex in the media, and there are books and there are songs, but none of them actually represent sexual initiation or contraception at all. No one says, "Oh, yeah, what are you using for contraception?" They never had that on the TV. So I read that one of the main reasons that men and women don't finish community college in the way they planned was an unplanned pregnancy. How can we change that?
I mean, if people are coming to college, they planned their college. But now they have to stop or have an interrupted course because of a baby that they didn't plan. What are we going to do about that?
Grace: I think that it is a broad issue, and it's something that Healthy People 2020, it's a huge part of their initiative is reducing the unintended pregnancy rate and increasing the intended pregnancy rate, because at the moment, 45% of pregnancies are unintended. And for students in college, who are 18 to 25, they are the most likely to experience an unintended pregnancy and they're also the most likely to be uninsured.
So there's a variety of issues there when it comes to a lack of knowledge and education coming into college. There's a coverage gap. There is the expense of care, which tends to be about $600 or more out of pocket for uninsured students.
Dr. Jones: For contraception?
Grace: For contraception.
Dr. Jones: If they want a long-acting method. It's cheaper if you're using condoms, of course.
Grace: Of course, but condoms are less reliable, and a lot of students don't like condoms in the sense of like their pleasure. And as they are less reliable, students are hoping to find a method that works with them.
Dr. Jones: So tell me about the Campus Contraceptive Initiative.
Grace: So the Campus Contraceptive Initiative is a interdisciplinary group of students, researchers and providers who are all targeting that issue of college completion, graduation and promoting family planning.
And so we are working through research and education to expand access to services, because we find that a lot of students don't know about the different options that they have when it comes to contraception. And so when it comes to finding the best method, they first need to have the education and that step of these are all the methods available to you. And then what does it look like in pricing? What does that look like for coverage? Where can you actually get those services?
Dr. Jones: So you've been doing a survey. You did a little survey last year, and you've been working on one this year. Any clues from your science so far in terms of what are people thinking out there?
Grace: Yes. We have definitely found out a lot of interesting things. That first survey, that went out last February, we got about 330 students to respond, and they were asked questions about their current sexual health, their knowledge as well as their desire or interest in a low-cost contraceptive clinic on campus.
We found out that 1% of students are currently going to the Student Health Center on campus, and that really blew us away because we found out that a lot of students are going to their doctor, but we know that a lot of students aren't comfortable with telling their parents about the services that they get.
And so that we have this huge uninsured gap of students where if they were able to access care at the Student Health Center, maybe they're being turned away because of the out-of-pocket prices, maybe they're being turned away of not knowing their options.
Dr. Jones: The Student Health Center, it may be student health, but it still has to be paid for. So students, unless they have that particular kind of student health insurance, still have to come up with money, and maybe their parents, if they use their parents' insurance, then their parents are going to get the bills or get the copays or get the information at home, so privacy becomes an issue.
Grace: It definitely does. And we saw that students, when asked about if they could have low-cost, affordable methods, 95% of students said, "Yes, I am interested in that." And many of those students said that they would actually partake in a service like that.
But broadly students want to know about the methods. We found that it wasn't just the birth control pill that was popular. If we were to have this contraceptive clinic, it was options. Across the board students want options for their birth control.
Dr. Jones: So where can college students get information about contraception? What methods are out there? How they work and where and how to get them? What's good information? What could they do right now?
Grace: Well, I would say that there are two wonderful resources out there. Bedsider.org is one. They have an incredible comprehensive list of different options, how they work, the different varieties. For example, since the IUD, there are several different types of IUDs, being able to click on each one and seeing how they're different and what they might do.
And they are wonderful because they also can connect you with emergency contraception to your door or sending your monthly birth control to your door rather than going in clinic. And so they have a great set of resources. Also Planned Parenthood Learn, which is an offshoot of the broader Planned Parenthood website, also has a really user-friendly interface that can compare methods and look at methods and connect you to one of their clinics.
Dr. Jones: Okay. So both of these options have a place where you could put in your ZIP code and you can find out clinics where you could get healthcare?
Grace: Yes.
Dr. Jones: Well, that's good to know, and people need to know more. And having a reproductive life plan, a family planning plan is important if you want to have the family that you want when you want it, or if you don't want it, get the knowledge that you need and get it right. You worked hard to get into a university and you're working hard to finish, and this part of your life takes a little effort, but it's worth it. And thanks for joining us on The Scope. And thanks, Grace.
Grace: Thank you.
Announcer: Have a question about a medical procedure? Want to learn more about a health condition? With over 2,000 interviews with our physicians and specialists, there's a pretty good chance you'll find what you want to know. Check it out at thescoperadio.com.
Less than half of high schools in the United States mandate contraceptive and sexual education. The University of Utah's Campus Contraceptive Initiative (CCI) promotes family planning within the university setting. Access of contraceptive options for university students. |
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Family Planning: Vasectomy as an Effective Form of Birth ControlWomen are often responsible for birth control in… +6 More
February 07, 2019
Family Health and Wellness
Mens Health
You and your partner now have three kids. And for the whole of your relationship, you've been responsible for the family planning part of family planning. And now, you and your honey decide that your family is full. You guys have all the kids you've wanted. Is it his turn? This is Dr. Kirtly Jones from Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Utah Health, and this is Vasectomy on "The Seven Domains of Women's Health" on The Scope.
Women have largely had the responsibility for reversible contraception in any heterosexual relationship. Whether they took that responsibility seriously and planned all their children, or they had a number of kids by chance, what you do when you're done having kids? About 23% of American couples rely on a permanent form of contraception, such as tubal ligation or vasectomy. That's about one in four.
Now, attitudes about vasectomy vary dramatically around the world. In the U.S., 1 in 5 guys over 35 has had a vasectomy. Men who have more education, have higher income are more likely to choose a vasectomy. Men on the West Coast are more likely to use vasectomy than men on the East Coast, and both are more likely to use vasectomy than men in the South. Hispanic men and African-American men are less likely to choose vasectomy.
In countries such as Canada, in countries in Scandinavia, about 1 out of 3 men over 35 have had a vasectomy. That's a lot of guys. Other high-income countries with high vasectomy use and high gender equity, that's an important thing. Where there's gender equity, more guys have picked up a responsibility for contraception include Australia, the Czech Republic, New Zealand, Spain, South Korea, Switzerland, and the UK. In some cultures, Africa in general, vasectomy is extremely rare.
Firstly, both methods are very safe, with very few complications related to the procedure. However, tubal ligation requires either regional anesthesia, such as an epidural or spinal if a woman's having her tubal right after the baby is born, or need general anesthesia if it's done sometime after a baby when it's done by laparoscopy. A vasectomy is done under local anesthesia, which is much less risky. Women have to have their abdomen entered to have their tubes tied. For men, the vas is right under the skin of their scrotum. So it's much easier. For men, it can be done with an incision so small it doesn't even need stitches and often takes only 15 minutes. The time to recovery is faster with a vasectomy than a tubal, a couple of days for men versus a week or two for women.
Now, although men may have some pain and bruising in the scrotum after vasectomy, long-term pain occurs in less than 1 in 100 men. Contrary to many men's fears, a vasectomy doesn't lower testosterone levels, and there's no change in sexual desire. In fact, in a 2015 Stanford study, found that women whose partners had had a vasectomy were 46% more likely to have sex at least once a week compared to women whose men hadn't had the procedure. Now, that's a complicated number, and there might be a lot of interesting statistics packed in that. But at least it doesn't make you stop doing what you want to do. Both methods are very effective with pregnancy rates less than 1 in 100 couples per year. And 1 study suggested that the rate of pregnancy after vasectomy was as low as 1 in 2,000.
Now, there are some rules. You cannot count on your vasectomy for contraception until you've had an assessment of the sperm to show that there's no more sperm coming out. This may take several months and 20 ejaculations to clear all the sperm in the pipeline. Some men may have cleared the sperm in a shorter period of time. But the important thing is the ejaculate must be checked, confirmed that there are no more sperm.
Now, costs are different, but both methods are usually covered by insurance. Under the Affordable Care Act, some states have actually included vasectomy in the no-cost part of contraception. If you had to pay out of pocket, vasectomy could cost $700 to $1,200. And tubal ligation, if it isn't done at the time of delivery, could be as much as $5,000.
So far, this has been about couples in a committed, long-term relationship. But vasectomy has been increasing in young men who've never had children. It is the only method of contraception that gives men private power over their choice to have children. Increasingly, young men are requesting vasectomy as they're very sure they never want to have kids. In the past, physicians were unwilling to perform a vasectomy on a man who had not fathered children. This behavior on the part of physicians has changed in many places as the role of patient autonomy, the right of a person to make decisions about their own bodies, and healthcare has increasingly informed their attitudes about sterilization.
So what happens if you fall in love with a guy who's had a vasectomy and you always wanted kids? This is the time for an honest discussion about hopes and expectations for a long-term relationship. Perhaps the guy never wanted kids until he met you. The options for returning fertility to a man who's had a vasectomy include vas reversal, which is successful about 50% of the time, depending on the skill of the surgeon who's putting this tiny tube called the vas back together. It also depends on how long ago the vasectomy was performed and the age of the man.
For men in whom the vas reversal doesn't work to restore their fertility, in vitro fertilization to retrieve sperm from their testes can be very successful. If your guy has had a vasectomy in the past and still is quite firm in his desire to never have children, that's a more complicated discussion.
So if you and your guy have decided that he is going to have a vasectomy, where can it be done? Well, some family planning clinics have vasectomy services, and some family docs do vasectomies. It's a short office procedure. Most urologists do vasectomies. Only urologists do vasectomy reversal, and you should choose someone who has this more complicated procedure as part of their regular practice.
If for some reason your guy chooses to have a back-up, some men choose to freeze sperm in case they change their minds for whatever reason, change in circumstances such as change in partners or loss of a child. Most fertility centers that do in vitro fertilization can freeze and store sperm. And if a couple should decide that they want a kid after vasectomy, then IVF is an option. However, you and your partner make your decisions, we offer all of these services at the University of Utah Health, and your family choices are important to us.
What you need to know about a vasectomy. Learn whether or not a vasectomy is the right form of permanent contraception for you. |
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How Soon Should I Start Planning for the Next Baby?You just had your baby, so when your doctor asks… +3 More
June 11, 2015
Family Health and Wellness
Womens Health
Dr. Jones: You just had your first baby. I mean JUST and the doctors ask you what you want to use for contraception. You blink, go blank, and say, "I'll think about that later." But the best time to think about planning your next baby might be right now. This is Dr. Kirtly Jones from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Utah Health Care, and this is postpartum contraception on The Scope.
Announcer: Covering all aspects of women's health, this is The 7 Domains of Women's Health with Dr. Kirtly Jones on The Scope.
Dr. Jones: Traditionally women and doctors have talked about planning for the next baby and spacing your children at the six week postpartum visit. And that's good, but a very high percent of women have already had sex before their first postpartum visit, and a very high percent of women don't even go to their postpartum visit.
Life and the new baby get in the way but there is a very good evidence that it's a very good idea to space your children at least two to three years apart. So what's the evidence? First, there's the case for the mom. Mom needs to have their uterus to heal, especially if they've had a caesarean and about one out of five women American women are going to have a caesarean, and in some places, one in three. And babies born sooner than 18 months from the last pregnancy are more likely to be smaller and more likely to be premature.
And women, hopefully, can breastfeed for 6 to 12 months, which is pretty good contraception, and another pregnancy can get in the way of breastfeeding. So women who've had a caesarian and get pregnant right away are more likely to tear open their uterine scar, rupture their uterus.
But babies need extra time too. We mentioned breastfeeding, but there's also very important mom time that helps with language development and emotional development. Some studies suggest that the ideal spacing for babies is three years apart. Kids should be able to walk, talk, feed themselves, and other important bodily functions before they face competition from another kid. Kids born closer than three years apart are less likely to be reading-ready when they start for school. So why should you think about planning for your next baby right after you've had one, and what can you do?
Number one. If you don't do something, you could get pregnant as soon as 28 days after delivery. This is the earliest that non-breastfeeding women can ovulate after the delivery. Babies born within the same year are affectionately called 'Irish twins'.
Two. You could use breastfeeding as your contraceptive method, but you have to breastfeed exclusively. No bottles, no formula, no food, no juice, no sleeping through the night.
Three. If you're sure that you've finished your family, you can consider having your tubes tied while you're still in the hospital; sometimes, within hours or so of delivery. Of course, you can send your man to have his tubes tied while you're recovering in the hospital from your delivery.
Four. You can have low dose hormonal implant put in your arm in the hospital before you go home. It doesn't affect breastfeeding and it lasts three years.
Five is to have an IUD placed right after the baby and the placenta come out. If you've had a caesarian section, it can be placed right in the operating room, and then you don't have to think about it. You'll have 5 to 12 years of protection depending on what kind of IUD you choose, or you can it removed in a couple of years and plan your next baby.
Are there problems with putting in an IUD so soon? There's an increased chance that it might fall out. The uterus is big, the IUD is tiny, and the cervix is open from the birth. Your doctor should check when you come back for a visit that it's in the right place if you have it placed right after the baby is born. Another problem is not all doctors know how to do this, but we've been doing this at the university hospital for several years now. Insurances may not want to pay for a contraceptive method that usually is done in the clinic when it's done at the time of birth, but several states have taken steps to remove this barrier.
If you're interested in any of these options, make sure that you talk with your doctor or midwife during your pregnancy so they can be ready to get you what you need after you deliver. Putting some time between babies is good for moms and good for babies. Think about what you would like to do and talk about it with your health care provider when you're pregnant. We can give you options that are highly effective and highly reversible and highly forgettable until you're ready for your next baby.
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