紧急避孕:生殖健康项目的重要组成部分。

J. Beitz, J. Hutchings
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引用次数: 4

摘要

另见第188页紧急避孕是指在无保护性交后最初几天内为防止怀孕而使用的避孕方法。尽管体外受精是一种重要的生殖健康选择,但它仍未得到充分利用。在30多年前的科学文献中首次描述了使用雌性激素的类似物,雌激素和黄体酮,进行性交后避孕。然而,仅仅在过去的7年里,EC才开始从“保守得最好的秘密”变成避孕药的主流。最常见的避孕方法是在无保护的性行为后尽快增加口服避孕药的剂量——最好是在72小时内(3天)。12小时后服用第二剂。在无保护的性行为后5天内插入宫内节育器是另一种较少使用的体外受精方法。尽管宫内节育器是有效的,并且对许多妇女来说是一种合适的方法,但避孕药更容易管理,并且可以被更广泛的用户群体使用。在许多国家,可以使用专用产品作为EC,尽管在没有特别标记的EC产品的情况下也可以使用标准口服避孕药。在美国,食品和药物管理局已经批准了标签外的ecprescrided与许多其他卫生优先事项不同,对保健服务的客户和提供者进行欧共体教育以及增加欧共体获取的需求并不局限于世界上某个特定的国家或地区。在发展中国家和发达国家,EC不仅是一种未被充分利用的避孕方法,而且是一种不被理解和经常完全不为人知的避孕方法。然而,在发展中国家,与意外怀孕相关的发病率和死亡率尤其惊人。发展中国家每年约有7500万意外怀孕,每年有800万至3000万妇女避孕失败。2,3意外怀孕的妇女往往寻求堕胎;据估计,每年有4500万例妊娠因堕胎而终止,其中约有一半是在不安全的条件下进行的在大多数发展中世界,如撒哈拉以南非洲和拉丁美洲,获得安全堕胎服务受到严重限制,败血性流产造成的孕产妇死亡可能超过所有其他原因造成的孕产妇死亡。在不安全堕胎中幸存下来的妇女往往患有衰弱和慢性疾病,包括不孕症;增加异位妊娠的风险;引起慢性疼痛的腹部粘连;阴道、宫颈、子宫、膀胱或直肠的结构性损伤;慢性贫血的恶化。除了这种不必要的人类痛苦负担之外,向这些患重病的妇女提供补救保健服务的费用使国家无法获得更具成本效益的预防保健所需的资金。少女遭受意外怀孕和不安全堕胎的比例尤其高。在世界范围内,与怀孕有关的死亡是15至19岁(已婚或未婚)女孩死亡的主要原因。与20岁至24岁的女性相比,这个年龄段的女性在怀孕期间死亡的几率要高出20%至200%选择终止妊娠的女孩通常比年长妇女等待更长的时间,并遭受更多危及生命的并发症,这导致了大量与堕胎有关的死亡通过预防意外怀孕和堕胎,提高对EC的认识和获得EC的途径是改善包括青少年在内的所有妇女健康和福祉的一个关键途径。世界卫生组织最近的一项研究发现,在中国上海,如果妇女只使用左炔诺孕酮,60%的人工流产本来是可以避免的然而,尽管EC可以在减少意外怀孕和降低堕胎率方面发挥重要作用,但在可能的使用者和卫生保健专业人员之间存在着关于EC的重大知识差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emergency contraception: a vital component of reproductive health programs.
see also p 188 Emergency contraception (EC) refers to contraceptive methods that may beused in the first few days after unprotected intercourse to prevent pregnancy.Although EC is an essential reproductive health option, it remains vastlyunderused. The use of analogs of the female hormones, estrogen and progesterone, aspostcoital contraception was first described in the scientific literature morethan 30 years ago. However, only within about the past 7 years has EC begun tomove from being the “best-kept secret” into the contraceptivemainstream. The most common method of EC involves taking an increased dose of oralcontraceptive pills as soon as possible—optimally, within 72 hours (3days)—after unprotected sex. A second dose is taken 12 hours later.Insertion of an intrauterine device within 5 days of unprotected sex isanother, less frequently used, method of EC. Although intrauterine devices areeffective, and their use is an appropriate method for many women, pills areeasier to administer and may be taken by a wider user group. In many countries, dedicated products are available for use as EC, althoughstandard oral contraceptives can also be used in the absence of a specificallylabeled EC product. In the United States, the Food and Drug Administration hasendorsed off-label ECprescribing.1 Unlike many other health priorities, the need for EC education for bothclients and providers of health services and increasing EC access are notlimited to one particular country or region of the world. In both developingand developed countries, EC remains not only an underused but alsomisunderstood and often completely unknown method of contraception. However,the morbidity and mortality associated with unintended pregnancy in thedeveloping world are particularly striking. About 75 million unintended pregnancies occur in the developing worldannually, and each year 8 to 30 million women experience contraceptivefailure.2,3Women who have an unintended pregnancy often seek abortion; of the estimated45 million pregnancies that are terminated by abortion each year, about halfare performed under unsafeconditions.4 In most of the developing world, such as in sub-Saharan Africa and LatinAmerica, where access to safe abortion services is severely restricted,maternal deaths due to septic abortion can exceed those from all other causes.Women who survive unsafe abortion often suffer debilitating and chronicmorbidity, including infertility; increased risk of ectopic pregnancy;abdominal adhesions that cause chronic pain; structural damage to vagina,cervix, uterus, bladder, or rectum; and exacerbation of chronic anemia. Inaddition to this burden of unnecessary human suffering, the cost of providingremedial health services to these acutely ill women robs countries of fundsneeded for more cost-effective preventive care. Adolescent girls, in particular, suffer disproportionately from unintendedpregnancies and unsafe abortion. Worldwide, pregnancy-related deaths are theleading cause of death for girls aged 15 to 19 years (married or unmarried).Women in this age group face a 20% to 200% greater chance of dying inpregnancy than women from 20 to 24 yearsold.5 Girls whochoose to terminate a pregnancy characteristically wait longer than olderwomen and suffer more life-threatening complications, which result in asubstantial number of abortion-attributabledeaths.6 Increasing awareness of and access to EC is one critical way to improve thehealth and well-being of all women, including adolescents, by preventingunintended pregnancy and abortion. A recent study by the World HealthOrganization found that 60% of induced abortions in Shanghai, China, couldhave been prevented if women had used levonorgestrel-onlyEC.7 However,despite the important role EC can play in both reducing unintended pregnancyand decreasing abortion rates, there exists a significant knowledge gap aboutEC among both possible users and health care professionals.
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