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Contraceptive Effectiveness

The rate of success or failure of a method of CONTRACEPTION; CONTRACEPTIVE AGENTS; or CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES.
Also Known As:
Birth Control Effectiveness; Birth Control Failure; Contraception Failure; Contraceptive Failure; Birth Control Failures; Contraception Failures; Contraceptive Failures; Control Failure, Birth; Control Failures, Birth; Effectiveness, Birth Control; Effectiveness, Contraceptive; Failure, Birth Control; Failure, Contraception; Failure, Contraceptive; Failures, Birth Control; Failures, Contraception; Failures, Contraceptive
Networked: 128 relevant articles (4 outcomes, 19 trials/studies)

Relationship Network

Therapy Context: Research Results

Experts

1. Gallo, Maria F: 4 articles (08/2013 - 03/2005)
2. Grimes, David A: 4 articles (08/2013 - 03/2005)
3. Lopez, Laureen M: 4 articles (08/2013 - 10/2008)
4. Nanda, Kavita: 4 articles (08/2013 - 03/2005)
5. Schulz, Kenneth F: 4 articles (08/2013 - 03/2005)
6. Schwarz, Eleanor Bimla: 3 articles (12/2022 - 01/2017)
7. Edelman, Alison: 3 articles (01/2018 - 07/2013)
8. Simmons, Katharine B: 3 articles (02/2017 - 05/2015)
9. Trussell, James: 2 articles (01/2018 - 03/2009)
10. Curtis, Kathryn M: 2 articles (02/2017 - 12/2016)

Related Diseases

1. Acne Vulgaris
12/01/2023 - ": NOMAC-E2 shows a significantly better contraceptive effectiveness in young women and has no differential effect on acne, mood, and weight compared to COCLNG."
04/01/2013 - "Respondents completed 32 choice sets with 3 product options where each option was described by a product label: either combined pill, minipill, injection, implant, hormonal IUD, hormonal vaginal ring, hormonal transdermal patch or copper IUD; and by the attributes: effect on acne, effect on weight, frequency of administration, contraceptive effectiveness, doctor's recommendation, effect on periods and cost. "
07/01/2004 - "The synthetic progestins, norgestimate and norelgestromin, were designed to minimize the adverse effects such as acne, hirsuitism and metabolic changes observed with older oral contraceptives while maintaining contraceptive effectiveness and cycle control. "
01/01/2000 - " The following lists offer a brief insight into the breadth of research available to family planners: 1) the multicenter study of the lactational amenorrhea method to test its acceptability and efficacy as an introductory postpartum method; 2) the multinational study of breast cancer and depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) confirmed the decrease in risk of having breast cancer among women who are using DMPA; 3) several investigations on family planning particularly the new guidelines for family planning methods, contraceptive failure, and probability of conception after the 6th day of contraceptive cessation were studied; 4) researches were also made on the prevalence of Kaposi's sarcoma, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia among young and homosexual men, and other opportunistic infections secondary to AIDS/HIV infection, and the efficacy of zidovudine in the prevention of HIV vertical transmission; 5) trials have been conducted on the mechanism of IUDs, its relation to pelvic inflammatory disease, and the negligible result of prophylactic antibiotics in the risk of having upper genital tract infection after IUD insertion; and 6) reports from researches have indicated the relationship between hormonal contraception use and breast cancer; and between ovarian cancer, stroke, acne vulgaris and oral contraceptive use. "
01/01/2006 - "Norgestimate and norelgestromin mimic the physiologic effects of progesterone at the progesterone receptor; however, norelgestromin has negligible direct or indirect androgenic activity, suggesting that it may be suitable for women with disorders related to androgen excess (such as hirsutism, acne, and lipid disorders).Contraceptive effectiveness is usually a function of the efficacy of a contraceptive in combination with compliance with its dosing regimen. "
2. Hemorrhage
3. Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
12/01/1994 - "The contraceptive failure rate of condoms varies from 2 to 13%, depending on the study population, yet it is the contraceptive method with the greatest capacity to protect against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and AIDS. "
07/01/1993 - "In light of the AIDS epidemic, FDA approved the female condom based on its contraceptive effectiveness rather than on its ability to protect against STDs. "
01/01/2000 - " The following lists offer a brief insight into the breadth of research available to family planners: 1) the multicenter study of the lactational amenorrhea method to test its acceptability and efficacy as an introductory postpartum method; 2) the multinational study of breast cancer and depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) confirmed the decrease in risk of having breast cancer among women who are using DMPA; 3) several investigations on family planning particularly the new guidelines for family planning methods, contraceptive failure, and probability of conception after the 6th day of contraceptive cessation were studied; 4) researches were also made on the prevalence of Kaposi's sarcoma, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia among young and homosexual men, and other opportunistic infections secondary to AIDS/HIV infection, and the efficacy of zidovudine in the prevention of HIV vertical transmission; 5) trials have been conducted on the mechanism of IUDs, its relation to pelvic inflammatory disease, and the negligible result of prophylactic antibiotics in the risk of having upper genital tract infection after IUD insertion; and 6) reports from researches have indicated the relationship between hormonal contraception use and breast cancer; and between ovarian cancer, stroke, acne vulgaris and oral contraceptive use. "
4. HIV Infections (HIV Infection)
10/01/1993 - " Sections briefly discuss consistent and correct condom use, other studies indicating that condoms have a high contraceptive failure rate, the Mariposa study which found several brands of condoms to leak viruses similar to HIV, safer sex education detractors on the basis of regular condom breakage, whether it is realistic to think that people will use condoms consistently and correctly, condom testing and regulation, the absence of microscopic holes in condoms through which HIV may pass, the 74% effectiveness of the female condom (Reality) in preventing pregnancy, nonoxynol-9, abstinence as a means of preventing HIV infection, the rationale behind the federal government's renewed support for condom use, education programs about condoms, and why the federal government would promote condoms when they are not 100% foolproof. "
01/01/2000 - " The following lists offer a brief insight into the breadth of research available to family planners: 1) the multicenter study of the lactational amenorrhea method to test its acceptability and efficacy as an introductory postpartum method; 2) the multinational study of breast cancer and depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) confirmed the decrease in risk of having breast cancer among women who are using DMPA; 3) several investigations on family planning particularly the new guidelines for family planning methods, contraceptive failure, and probability of conception after the 6th day of contraceptive cessation were studied; 4) researches were also made on the prevalence of Kaposi's sarcoma, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia among young and homosexual men, and other opportunistic infections secondary to AIDS/HIV infection, and the efficacy of zidovudine in the prevention of HIV vertical transmission; 5) trials have been conducted on the mechanism of IUDs, its relation to pelvic inflammatory disease, and the negligible result of prophylactic antibiotics in the risk of having upper genital tract infection after IUD insertion; and 6) reports from researches have indicated the relationship between hormonal contraception use and breast cancer; and between ovarian cancer, stroke, acne vulgaris and oral contraceptive use. "
5. Amenorrhea
01/25/1992 - "Researchers analyzed data on 346 women from prospective studies conducted in 8 different countries which examined return of ovulation in breast feeding mothers to determine the contraceptive effectiveness of lactational amenorrhea. "
04/01/1990 - "Physicians have often undervalued the contraceptive effectiveness of lactational amenorrhea, yet obstetricians and gynecologists are ideally placed to promote both family planning and breastfeeding. "
04/01/1990 - "Physicians have often undervalued the contraceptive effectiveness of lactational amenorrhea, yet obstetricians and gynecologists are ideally placed to promote both breastfeeding and family planning. "
01/01/1974 - " The topics posed as questions were: how to judge a mature request for contraception; what are the causes of contraceptive failures and depressions; is a hypothalamic amenorrhea likely; are diaphragms, condoms, coitus interruptus, monthly pills, morning after pills, spermicides or deport injections recommended; how to prescribe contraception to a virgin; how to treat functional bleeding. "
06/01/2018 - "The progesterone vaginal ring (PVR) is a ring-shaped device designed for use by women in the postpartum period to regulate fertility by complementing and extending the contraceptive effectiveness of lactational amenorrhea to suppress ovulation.1 It is available in eight Latin American countries for use by breastfeeding women who want more effective modern contraceptives in addition to contraceptive benefits provided by lactational amenorrhea alone.1 The PVR is a method that can be suitable to women in sub-Saharan Africa, given the near-universal practice of breastfeeding and the current level of unmet need for contraception in the postpartum period. "

Related Drugs and Biologics

1. Contraceptive Agents (Contraceptives)
2. Oral Contraceptives
3. Progesterone
4. Anti-Bacterial Agents (Antibiotics)
5. Medroxyprogesterone Acetate (Depo-Provera)
6. Zidovudine (Retrovir)
7. N,N-dimethyl-4-anisidine (DMPA)
8. norelgestromin (LNGO)
9. norgestimate
10. Teratogens

Related Therapies and Procedures

1. Hormonal Contraception
2. Condoms (Condom)
3. Contraception (Birth Control)
4. Female Condoms (Female Condom)
5. Postcoital Contraception (Emergency Contraception)