If oral contraception were to be dispensed without a prescription, Grossman recommends the progestin-only pill be the only one offered initially. If the combination pill were eventually to be offered, it would need to be done in concert with other safeguards. “There needs to be some other step so women have the tools to fi age of 34 or women with high-blood pressure. The progestin pill is also used for breast-feeding mothers because it doesn’t interfere with lactation. Although there are fewer contraindications with the progestin-only pill, only 5% of women who use oral contraceptives take it. That might be because there’s some concern it’s less effective than the combo pill, although research has not borne that out.
If oral contraception were to be dispensed without a prescription, Grossman recommends the progestin-only pill be the only one offered initially. If the combination pill were eventually to be offered, it would need to be done in concert with other safeguards. “There needs to be some other step so women have the tools to fi age of 34 or women with high-blood pressure. The progestin pill is also used for breast-feeding mothers because it doesn’t interfere with lactation. Although there are fewer contraindications with the progestin-only pill, only 5% of women who use oral contraceptives take it. That might be because there’s some concern it’s less effective than the combo pill, although research has not borne that out.
If oral contraception were to be dispensed without a prescription, Grossman recommends the progestin-only pill be the only one offered initially. If the combination pill were eventually to be offered, it would need to be done in concert with other safeguards. “There needs to be some other step so women have the tools to fi age of 34 or women with high-blood pressure. The progestin pill is also used for breast-feeding mothers because it doesn’t interfere with lactation. Although there are fewer contraindications with the progestin-only pill, only 5% of women who use oral contraceptives take it. That might be because there’s some concern it’s less effective than the combo pill, although research has not borne that out.
If oral contraception were to be dispensed without a prescription, Grossman recommends the progestin-only pill be the only one offered initially.