The myth of menstruation: how menstrual regulation and suppression impact contraceptive choice
Published 2019 View Full Article
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Title
The myth of menstruation: how menstrual regulation and suppression impact contraceptive choice
Authors
Keywords
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Journal
BMC Womens Health
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Online
2019-10-28
DOI
10.1186/s12905-019-0827-x
References
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Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Real-world experience of women using extended-cycle vs monthly-cycle combined oral contraception in the United States: the National Health and Wellness Survey
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- There might be blood: a scoping review on women’s responses to contraceptive-induced menstrual bleeding changes
- (2018) Chelsea B. Polis et al. Reproductive Health
- Cross-sectional evaluation of the impact of information on flexible extended regimens of oral contraceptives in the choices made by women seeking contraceptive counselling: the FLEXO study
- (2018) Iñaki Lete et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CONTRACEPTION AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE
- Menstruation, objectification and health-related quality of life: A questionnaire study
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- Monthly Periods—Are They Necessary?
- (2015) Sarah E. Strandjord et al. PEDIATRIC ANNALS
- Understanding the low uptake of long-acting reversible contraception by young women in Australia: a qualitative study
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- Menstrual suppression for adolescents
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- Characteristics of scheduled bleeding manipulation with combined hormonal contraception in university students
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- The Presence of Mucosal Iron in the Fallopian Tube Supports the “Incessant Menstruation Hypothesis” for Ovarian Carcinoma
- (2013) Jeffrey D. Seidman INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGICAL PATHOLOGY
- How the Pill Became a Lifestyle Drug: The Pharmaceutical Industry and Birth Control in the United States Since 1960
- (2012) Elizabeth Siegel Watkins AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
- Contraception technology: past, present and future
- (2012) Regine Sitruk-Ware et al. CONTRACEPTION
- Determinants of long-acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) use by adolescent girls and young women
- (2012) Preeti Bharadwaj et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CONTRACEPTION AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE
- Menstrual bleeding: perspective of Brazilian women
- (2011) María Y. Makuch et al. CONTRACEPTION
- Fifty years on “the pill”: a qualitative analysis of nondaily contraceptive options
- (2011) Beth Sundstrom CONTRACEPTION
- The 'incessant menstruation' hypothesis: a mechanistic ovarian cancer model with implications for prevention
- (2011) P. Vercellini et al. HUMAN REPRODUCTION
- Contraceptive methods and use by women aged 35 and over: A qualitative study of perspectives
- (2011) Emily M Godfrey et al. BMC Womens Health
- Menstrual manipulation: Options for suppressing the cycle
- (2010) C. W. HICKS et al. CLEVELAND CLINIC JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
- Attitudes and beliefs about the intrauterine device among teenagers and young women
- (2010) Kendra L. Fleming et al. CONTRACEPTION
- “More natural but less normal”: Reconsidering medicalisation and agency through women’s accounts of menstrual suppression
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