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Family planning

GP advises Contraceptive Implant or Mirena Coil when I'm happy on the pill

39 replies

pumasalient · 29/05/2012 21:24

Hi
I went to see my GP this morning for a prescription review and he asked me why I am on the combined pill when it would be better for me to be on either the contraceptive implant or the Mirena Coil. I am 34 years old, have low blood pressure and am very happy on the pill. He started citing that pill users have a higher increase of breast cancer and blood clots etc etc. It took me by surprise and made me a bit worried. I have no problems being on this particular pill (others in the past haven't suited me) and I REALLY don't fancy either of these alternatives. In the leaflet he gave me it said that 1 in 20 women suffer from displacement with the coil and may not realise which of course could cause pregnancy. Has anyone else been to their GP and had a similar experience? I wondered if Drs receive any kind of payment when women have these fitted?
Thanks

OP posts:
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sumsumsumsum · 29/05/2012 23:28

It's the site of a law firm, though. It's not totally random. Grin

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PacificDogwood · 29/05/2012 23:30

Funny, how big low firms don't go on about the health implications of pregnancy, nevermind unwanted pregnancy, never-nevermind unwanted teenaged pregnancy Hmm.

Truly, the only method of avoiding unwante conception is abstinence. Which may have serious sideeffects on a relationship... So by all means, be as well informed as you can be, then take a leap of faith and go with whatever method you are most comfortable with. Which may change over the course of a lifetime.

Google will tell you not a lot about what might be right for you or your DCs.

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PacificDogwood · 29/05/2012 23:31

law firms, btw, not low firms

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expatinscotland · 29/05/2012 23:31

Or STI's, PD :o.

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sumsumsumsum · 29/05/2012 23:33

Yes, I would say a girl with an implant is more likely to contract HIV. Because it will be hard for her to argue to a man that he must wear a condom. He's just not going to.

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PacificDogwood · 29/05/2012 23:33

Oh yeah, the joy that is STIs. In teenagers Sad.

My boys will be welded into condoms from oh... say 12 til they are 85 35 which is when I think male puberty ends. Maybe. Grin

Over and out, night, all.

PS expat, I've pm'd you x.

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PrematurelyAirconditioned · 29/05/2012 23:34

Let's face it, abstinence has its fair share of user error too Smile.

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PacificDogwood · 29/05/2012 23:35

Ah, no need to let known that she has an implant is there?

Oh, what loving trusting young adults we are forced to raise Sad.

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expatinscotland · 29/05/2012 23:36

Night!

Owners of pre-teens, invest in a stack of condoms and a bunch of bananas. Get those kids rolling 'em on to practice!

Cover your stump, before you bump.

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sumsumsumsum · 29/05/2012 23:36

So do you advise teens not to tell?

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PacificDogwood · 29/05/2012 23:42

Oh gawd, I really, really need to go to bed, but here goes:

I advise teens to think about whether they want to engage in sexual activity. I think a lot of girl (and boys) have a huge amount of peer pressure to deal with because 'everybody is doing it' - when they are not. Or at least not as many as would like to make you believe they are.
I do NOT advise anybody to say anything specifically, but one of the advantages of the implant is that it is discrete. I would advise to walk away from anyone who'd refuse to take a simple precaution that, let's face it, also protects him, when asked by a person her allegedly loves, or at least fancies.

Our girls need their self-esteem boosting and their respect for themselves.
Don't get me on my feminist soapbox.
I despair about some of the things I hear: 'He'll leave me if I don't sleep with him' said today by 15 year old girls who'd been 'going' with her boyfriend for 2 weeks. 'You cannot get pregnant when you do it standing up/the first time'. 'The pill makes you fat' - yes, sometimes it does, but so does pregnancy. And so on, and so forth.

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expatinscotland · 30/05/2012 09:43

There's also, sadly, a shocking percentage of young people who have a very cavalier attitude towards STI transmission.

Sad

Again, it's a self-esteem issue, to have so little regard for your own health.

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sumsumsumsum · 30/05/2012 13:21

IMO if they are persuaded to have an implant, they will get the impression that grown-ups aren't bothered about STI transmission either.

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PrematurelyAirconditioned · 30/05/2012 13:39

But sum, there is no such thing as a method which offers good protection against pg and STIs, apart from mutual masturbation or total abstinence. Either you pick one over the other or you double up - that's just the way it is. If a teen is advised to use reliable contraception plus condoms for STIs then she may not bother with the condoms but she shouldn't conclude that adults don't care.

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