Titre :
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How do women and health care professionals view hormonal long-acting reversible contraception? Results from an international survey (2019)
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Auteurs :
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T. FAUSTMANN, Auteur ;
J. CROCKER, Auteur ;
C. MOELLER, Auteur
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Type de document :
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Article : Article de périodique
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Dans :
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EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CONTRACEPTION & REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE (THE) (Vol. 24 - N° 6, December 2019)
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Article en page(s) :
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pp.422-429
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Index. décimale :
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232 (Contraception intra-utérine)
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Catégories :
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ALLEMAGNE
ANALYSE COMPARATIVE
BELGIQUE
CANADA
CONTRACEPTION
CONTRACEPTION HORMONALE
CONTRACEPTION INTRA-UTERINE
DISPOSITIF INTRA-UTERIN
ENQUETE
FRANCE
IMAGE DE LA CONTRACEPTION
IMPLANT CONTRACEPTIF
OPINION
PAYS DEVELOPPES
PAYS INDUSTRIALISES
USAGE DE LA PILULE
USAGE DU CONTRACEPTIF
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Résumé :
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Of 6903 women who completed the survey, 3225 provided information about their current primary contraception method. Overall, 16% used long-acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) methods, while 52% used oral contraceptives (OCs). Of hormonal intrauterine system users, 72% described their experience as 'very favourable', compared with only 53% of women using OCs. Anonymous patient records were provided by 550 health care professionals who completed the online survey. Most women (64%) had used short-acting reversible contraception before switching to LARC. Physicians perceived 56-84% of LARC users to be highly satisfied with their current form of contraception.
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