What is the best contraception girl can use?

Which one is the safest and explain why? I can't use condoms
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Superb Opinion

  • I and my husband have selected pill, I am on pill. There are many options for girls / women prevent pregnancy, they include The Oral Contraceptive Pill. (I am using), Intrauterine Device (IUD) – safe for three to five years, The Contraceptive Implant. (not popular in India), The Contraceptive Injection. (not popular in India), Emergency Contraception Pill (available as over the counter - The 'Morning After' Pill), Contraceptive Ring. (most girls do not prefer) Diaphragm or female condom (not easily available and much less popular in India) and Sterilization – the last or ultimate option – usually done after producing two or three children). Getting frisky does not have to be risky, particularly when there are many contraception methods out there to suit different needs, and some of them also protect from sexually transmissible infections (STIs). The condom is the only form of contraception that protects against most STIs as well as preventing pregnancy, can be used on demand, is hormone free and can easily be carried with you. And it comes in male and female varieties. The Pill is highly effective little tablet taken once a day. The oral contraceptive pill is the most commonly used method across the world, contains estrogen and progestin or only one hormone, a progestin, remembering to take it on time is a must. IUD is small, T-shaped device, made from made of progesterone hormone or plastic and copper and is fitted inside a woman’s uterus by a trained healthcare provider, effective for three to 10 years, depending on the type. Contraceptive Implant is a small, flexible rod is placed under the skin in a woman’s upper arm, releasing a form of the hormone progesterone. The Injection contains a synthetic version of the hormone progestin. The ‘Morning After’ Pill is used to prevent pregnancy after sex if contraception was not used, a condom has broken during sex, or a woman has been sexually assaulted. While it is called the ‘Morning After’ pill, it is usually effective for up to five days after having unprotected sex, the sooner is better. Ring is a flexible plastic ring constantly releasing hormones that is placed in the vagina by the woman. It stays in place for three weeks, and then you remove it, take a week off then pop another one in. A diaphragm is a small, soft silicon dome is placed inside the vagina to stop sperm from entering the uterus. Sterilisation is the process of completely taking away the body’s ability to reproduce through open or minimal invasion surgery. It is a permanent method of contraception, suitable for people who are sure they never want children or do not want any more children.

Most Helpful Girl

  • Well the only perfect contraception is abstinence… However, to answer your question more seriously I think any hormone based contraceptive is the best. Either as a pill or as an implant which is very convenient.

Most Helpful Guys

  • IUD, implant, vaginal ring, or patch are among 'best' in my opinion because it's a set-it-and-forget-it kind of thing. The pill is probably among the easiest to turn around and get from an OBGYN. Some may not like taking pill daily, some are perfect with it.

    You can take out the ring whenever you want, even before sex if you'd like, it distills the birth control into your vagina over time.

    The patch is sort of the same but it stays on until you change it because the skin absorbs the birth control, but some people have problems keeping band-aids on, and they might not like a patch on their butt either.

    IUD the OBGYN inserts it and it can work for years, can be hormones or not, you just check the strings that come out of your cervix. I think this is the best one of this mix simply because it's semi-perm birth control for years. Implant is sort of the same in a sense just it would go under your shoulder arm.

  • IUDs are the safest. If memory serves me right, hormone IUDs are a tiny bit safer than copper ones, but for all practical purposes, they are equal.

    But any hormonal (or copper) contraception is quite safe. However, nothing is 100 pct. safe (except abstinence).
    Are you sexually exclusive with your partner and why can't you use a condom?

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What Girls & Guys Said

1 12
  • Why can’t you use condoms?

    • They make me deflate LOL maybe it's the material

  • Why can you not use condoms? Latex allergy?

  • Don’t understand why you can’t use condoms, you get latex free ones.

    I would not be overly concerned on BC, it would be STD’s I would be more concerned about.

    the best birth control is likely going to be the one recommended by her doctor and she’s comfortable with.

  • The pill.

  • The pill would impede ovulation for that month. If she takes it regularly, there's no reason to worry.
    They are bound to cause some kind of unbalance in her hormonal status though, so at least in the beginning expect some changes in her. It's not the same for every woman, but often happens.

  • Point and laugh.
    Or a penny... hold it between her knees.
    :)

  • Condom. Why not?

  • I’m not sure talk to the females

  • Abstinence. Works everytime. After that, I’d have to say the pill.

  • Depends on. Each individuals anatomy , medical conditions , genetics and side effects.

  • pill

    • Is there anything that can be taken just right before sex

    • spermicide?

  • Oral, anal or abstinence

  • the IUD seems to becoming more popular