The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Couples urged to think about contracept­ion

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Couples in lockdown with “time on their hands” should consider using contracept­ion, Scotland’s chief medical officer has said.

At the Scottish Government’s daily media briefing in Edinburgh, Dr Catherine Calderwood suggested people should think carefully about getting pregnant during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Dr Calderwood said: “The serious point is that almost all maternity services are emergency services – they can’t be time limited, you can’t pause like elective surgery.

“It has been suggested to me that we talk to people about contracept­ion.

“About 50% of pregnancie­s are unplanned so perhaps think about whether this is the right time to have an unplanned pregnancy.

“This (coronaviru­s outbreak) will last for some time. The emergency services – the maternity services – will continue to run, though, so we have planned for all of the babies that would have been born to have exactly the same care that they would have had outside of this pandemic.

“But people are making difficult choices and we would always encourage people to think: ‘Is this the right time for me, am I in the best of health, is this a good time for me to start thinking about having a baby?”’

On the issue of already expectant mothers, Dr Calderwood said: “We are encouragin­g all women who are currently pregnant to come forward, to have their scans, to have their antenatal care.

“My colleagues in the maternity services across the country have changed what they are doing to offer virtual clinics so women don’t have to travel and don’t have to be seen faceto-face but of course, that contact does need to happen.”

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