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Q: What is a female condom?
Thats right, there is such a thing as a FEMALE CONDOM.
Also known as the vaginal pouch, the female condom is a disposable sheath designed to protect a woman from pregnancy and STDs by lining the vagina. (Kind of like the male's condom but inside of the female.) It can be used with a spermicide for added protection.
Always read instruction and study pictures before you begin. Use care when opening the condom package. Stand with one leg on a chair or the toilet. Holding the condom with the open end down, squeeze the inner ring between your thumb and middle finger. You can use your index finger to hold the condom steady. Still squeezing the ring, insert the inner ring into your vagina. You may need to use some of the lubricant contained in the package before you insert the ring. You can tell that it is in place when the inner ring is up just past the pubic bone. You can feel your pubic bone by curving your finger towards your front when it is a couple of inches inside your vagina. Then put your finger inside the sheath until you can feel the bottom of the inner ring. Now push the ring up into the vagina. Then push the inner ring high into the vagina, over your cervix. Use your index finger to push the ring past the pubic bone. It is two inches or so inside your vagina. The outer ring stays outside, resting open against your outer vaginal lips.
During sexual intercourse, guide the penis into the pouch. You can add lubricant inside or outside the pouch to make it more comfortable. After sex, remember do not stand up with the condom still in. (Sperm could leak into your vagina.) While lying down, twist the outer ring to close off the semen inside; now pull it out gently. Tie a knot in it and throw it in the trash (not the toilet). Use a new condom each time you have sexual intercourse. As extra protection against pregnancy, you can insert extra spermicidal cream, jelly, or foam into the vagina after removing the condom.
This method allows a woman to protect herself from STDs as well as pregnancy. Because the vaginal pouch does not require the male to be fully erect, it can be inserted well before penetration is desired. There is no need for withdrawal immediately following male orgasm, unlike traditional condoms. This method is fairly new and the information on effective use is somewhat limited. Some women complain that the sheath moves, or is noisy or uncomfortable.
Q: Is there such a thing as emergency contraception?
A: Yes there is such a thing as emergency contraception.
It is an emergency dose of certain birth control pills that prevents the sperm from meeting the egg or prevents the egg from attaching to the wall of the uterus (also called "the morning-after pill")
The pills contain hormones that can prevent pregnancy when taken in larger-than-normal doses. The first dose of pills can be taken within 3 to 5 hours of unprotected intercourse. The next dose of pills is taken 12 hours after the first set. Each dose is made up of two, four, or five pills, depending on the type of pill.
Emergency contraception is not recommended as a regular birth control method! Instead, it is used for emergencies only. If you are having sex and the condom breaks or slips off, if your diaphragm or cervical cap slips out of place, or you forget your birth control pills 2 days in a row, you may want to consider using emergency contraception. It is also available to teenagers who are forced to have unprotected sex against their will.
Emergency contraception must be prescribed by a doctor. It is also available at many health clinics. You must call as soon as possible after having unprotected sex, since it is most effective during the first 72 hours.
It is legal and available if necessary. Can be used if you are raped.
The side effects can be severe and are different with every female. You must get to a doctor immediately.
Perfect-use failure rate 25%
Nausea, vomiting, breast tenderness, and headache
IMPORTANT
This is NOT to be used as a birth control method! For emergency use only.
Q. Can you get pregnant from dried semen?
A. Although sperm can live for up to six days inside the female body, tends to not live very long outside of the human body, unless under clinical situatuons.
Q. If I'm on my period, can I still get pregnant? A. YES, very much so
Q. Do I have to go to my doctor to get on birth control?
A. No. You don't have to go to a doctor to get condoms, lubricants. You can buy a condom from almost any drug store,in many super markets or even on the Internet. For most other types of birth control, you should see your doctor.
Q. What should I do if a condom tears, while having intercourse?
A. You should wash as soon as possible. A shower is probably your best bet in this case. Make sure that you use soap and water as the soap will wash away most residue left behind from the semen and the torn condom. Try to refreain from douching as the procedure may actually push substances further in.
If you're concerned about Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs), you should see your doctor and get tested as soon as possible. If you know you were exposed to HIV or someone with AIDs, ask your doctor about an anti-HIV drug treatment.
Q. How many eggs does a woman have when she is born?
A. Unlike men, who produce new sperm daily throughout most of their lifetime, women are born with a specific number of undeveloped eggs (around one to two million) in their ovaries.
When a female reaches puberty and starts menstruating, only about 300,000 immature egg cells, or follicles, still remain. Some of these begin to develop with each monthly cycle. At this time, only one follicle matures into an ovum (egg) and bursts from an ovary into the fallopian tubes, initiating ovulation.
Through a process known as atresia, many of the follicles that don't develop into mature egg cells start to degenerate. As a result, only a few hundred remain at menopause. This will usually begin around forty-five to fifty years of age. Because of the hormonal changes that normally accompany menopause, the remaining follicles are unlikely to mature and will not become viable eggs. Women going through menopause can still get pregnant.
Q. He "came" on the outside of my vagina. Can I still get pregnant?
A. That's highly unlikely. If the sperm was deposited very close to the opening of the vagina, there is a VERY small chance they could make it inside the vagina. They still have to swim a very long way from there. Please don't make a habit of this. You can use a condom if you are in that situation and there is no penetration involved.
“pulling out” by a guy has a very high failure rate. This is due to the lubricating presence of pre-ejaculate fluid, which leaks out of the penis before ejaculation. Many times, there are more than enough sperm in "pre-cum" to impregnate a female.
Q. What is the Abortion Pill?
A. Mifepristone, also known as RU-486 or the French abortion pill. Mifepristone was first developed as an early-abortion drug in France in 1988, under the name RU-486.
After years of controversy, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has has now approved the drug for use in the U.S. Mifepristone comes in a pill form and it is used as an abortion method for the earliest days of pregnancy.
Q. What are its side effects of Mifepristone?
A. Most common side effects are: Uterine cramping, bleeding, nausea, and fatigue. Bleeding and spotting usually lasts for about nine to sixteen days. Heavy bleeding is possible, but extremely rare. In about one of every 100 women the bleeding becomes heavy enough to require a surgical procedure to stop it.
Q. How long after sex can I use a pregnancy test?
A. Home pregnancy tests are most accurate about 27 days after conception. This is when a menstrual period is 10 -12 days late. Newer pregnancy tests say you can use them one day after a missed period. If you suspect you are pregnant even though a home pregnancy test is negative, you should have an exam by a doctor.
Q. Are there other benefits to taking the pill, besides for birth control?
A. Yes, very much so. They can help reduce your menstrual cramps, regulate irregular periods, and make your menstrual flow lighter. The pill is also known to decrease the risk of ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, ovarian cysys, breast cysts, and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). They will also help with acne.
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Q. What is Fertilization?
Simple definition: The joining of an egg and sperm.
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