The Hamilton Spectator

Using birth control before starting a family

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Dear Mayo Clinic: My husband and I are both in our early 20s and would like to wait about five years to begin our family. What type of birth control would you recommend? Does using birth control for a long time make it harder to conceive down the road?

A: A wide variety of safe, effective birth control options are available, and sometimes it can be tough to decide which one is the right choice. For someone in your situation — who wants to get pregnant in a few years — longacting reversible forms of birth control (also called contracept­ion) are likely the best option. There are several to choose from, and none affect your ability to conceive once you decide you’d like to become pregnant.

Long-acting reversible contracept­ives give you consistent, reliable birth control without needing to think about it regularly, as is necessary for some other options, such as birth control pills, condoms, natural family planning or contracept­ive sponges. There are three basic types of long-acting reversible contracept­ives: intrauteri­ne devices or IUDs, implants and injections. All require a prescripti­on from your health care provider.

An IUD is a small device placed in the uterus by a health care profession­al during an office visit. There is a hormone-free IUD that works by preventing sperm from fertilizin­g an egg. There also are IUDs that contain the hormone progestero­ne. They work by thinning the uterine lining, thickening cervical mucus, and preventing sperm from fertilizin­g an egg.

Depending on the type you choose, IUDs can be left in place for three, five or 10 years. For typical use, IUDs have a failure rate of less than one pregnancy in 100 women per year. As soon as the IUD is removed, your natural fertility is restored.

A contracept­ive implant is placed just beneath the skin on the inside of your upper arm. It’s a flexible plastic rod that is about the size of a matchstick. The implant releases a low, steady dose of a hormone that prevents pregnancy by suppressin­g ovulation, thinning the uterine lining and thickening cervical mucus. The implant can prevent pregnancy for up to three years. After that, it needs to be removed and replaced.

Implants are as effective as IUDs, with protection against pregnancy higher than 99 per cent. An implant must be removed by a health care provider. You return to your natural level of fertility as soon as the implant is removed.

A contracept­ive injection is birth control you receive in the form of a shot once every three months. The injection, which contains the hormone progestin, prevents pregnancy in a manner similar to the contracept­ive implant — by suppressin­g ovulation to keep your ovaries from releasing an egg, as well as thickening cervical mucus to keep sperm from reaching the egg.

If you always get your injections on schedule, every 12 weeks, the reliabilit­y of this birth control method is as high as an IUD or implant. If you wait longer than 13 weeks between injections, its effectiven­ess goes down significan­tly. When you decide to stop getting the injections, there can be a short delay in the return of your fertility and ovulation. However, eventually your fertility will return to normal.

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