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Review
. 2002 Aug 6;137(3):180-9.
doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-137-3-200208060-00010.

Emergency contraception

Affiliations
Review

Emergency contraception

David A Grimes et al. Ann Intern Med. .

Abstract

Emergency contraception is used to prevent pregnancy after a coital act not adequately protected by a regular method of contraception. In contrast to early medical abortion, emergency contraception prevents a pregnancy from starting and does not disrupt an established pregnancy. The most commonly used approaches consist of two oral doses of contraceptive steroids. The levonorgestrel-only regimen (levonorgestrel, 0.75 mg, repeated in 12 hours) appears to be more effective and better tolerated than the Yuzpe regimen (ethinyl estradiol, 100 microg, and levonorgestrel, 0.5 mg, repeated in 12 hours). In the largest randomized, controlled trial to date, levonorgestrel prevented about 85% of pregnancies that would have occurred without its use. Hormonal emergency contraception has no known medical contraindications, although it is not indicated for suspected or confirmed pregnancy. However, if hormonal emergency contraception is inadvertently taken in early pregnancy, neither the woman nor the fetus will be harmed. Nausea and vomiting associated with the Yuzpe regimen can be reduced by prophylactic use of meclizine. A strong medical and legal case exists for making hormonal emergency contraception available over the counter, as has happened in countries other than the United States. Easier access to and wider use of emergency contraception could dramatically lower the high rates of unintended pregnancy and induced abortion in the United States.

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Comment in

  • Emergency contraception.
    Miller DP. Miller DP. Ann Intern Med. 2003 Feb 4;138(3):237-8; author reply 238. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-138-3-200302040-00024. Ann Intern Med. 2003. PMID: 12558366 No abstract available.

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