Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to go on the pill, parents said no, used condom instead, pregnant at 22.
Why didn't you add in the pill later? At 22 it seems like a person could make their own decisions. Did you have exigent circumstances?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But that's factually incorrect. One method does NOT always fail. And there are plenty of people who only use one method of birth control without becoming parents.
Ok, fair enough if you want to parse the words that way. I believe I told her that she should plan on the possibility (probability) one method failing if used in isolation many times, and to think of it like have a second goalie in a soccer game. I further suggested no "soccer" till marriage, but if you must play soccer only play with two goalies.
If you want your teen to only use one method of birth control you like playing roulette more than I do.
The effectiveness of an IUD is 99.8%. That is, if 1,000 women use an IUD for a year, 998 women will not get pregnant, and 2 women will get pregnant. That's the probability.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/the-birth-control-shift/380952/
Forgive me for feeling passionate about not being one of the 2.
I, personally, don't consider that roulette, but maybe you do.
Now, should a person still use a condom, if they use an IUD? Yes. But not for prevention of pregnancy. For prevention of STIs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But that's factually incorrect. One method does NOT always fail. And there are plenty of people who only use one method of birth control without becoming parents.
Ok, fair enough if you want to parse the words that way. I believe I told her that she should plan on the possibility (probability) one method failing if used in isolation many times, and to think of it like have a second goalie in a soccer game. I further suggested no "soccer" till marriage, but if you must play soccer only play with two goalies.
If you want your teen to only use one method of birth control you like playing roulette more than I do.
The effectiveness of an IUD is 99.8%. That is, if 1,000 women use an IUD for a year, 998 women will not get pregnant, and 2 women will get pregnant. That's the probability.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/the-birth-control-shift/380952/
Forgive me for feeling passionate about not being one of the 2.
I, personally, don't consider that roulette, but maybe you do.
Now, should a person still use a condom, if they use an IUD? Yes. But not for prevention of pregnancy. For prevention of STIs.
Anonymous wrote:What about health risks related to using the pills?
I'm happy to talk to my DD (and DS) about pregnancy prevention and STD prevention, and provide condoms, but I am a little leery about the side effects of the pill.
Is anyone else concerned about that?
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I would not give her an IUD. No matter how many times you say that it does not mean she should have sex, your giving her a way to have sex without consequences. Your words and actions send seperate messages
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But that's factually incorrect. One method does NOT always fail. And there are plenty of people who only use one method of birth control without becoming parents.
Ok, fair enough if you want to parse the words that way. I believe I told her that she should plan on the possibility (probability) one method failing if used in isolation many times, and to think of it like have a second goalie in a soccer game. I further suggested no "soccer" till marriage, but if you must play soccer only play with two goalies.
If you want your teen to only use one method of birth control you like playing roulette more than I do.
Anonymous wrote:
But that's factually incorrect. One method does NOT always fail. And there are plenty of people who only use one method of birth control without becoming parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I would not give her an IUD. No matter how many times you say that it does not mean she should have sex, your giving her a way to have sex without consequences. Your words and actions send seperate messages
An IUD is not a way to have sex without consequences. An IUD is a way to have sex without pregnancy. (I, personally, think that's a very good thing for a person who has sex and doesn't want to get pregnant.)
Anonymous wrote:I wanted to go on the pill, parents said no, used condom instead, pregnant at 22.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm the parent who did pill and then IUD. YES. I regularly and religiously told her that one method always fails and that people who only use one method of birth control are called parents. I always emphasized two methods were required, one always must be a condom.
I also always said the only thing that is 100% is abstinence.
BTW- I know a bunch of kids that ended up pregnant and at planned parenthood who were on nothing. I would imagine this is the "not my kid" crowd. OP - you are smart - mitigate that risk!!!!
But that's factually incorrect. One method does NOT always fail. And there are plenty of people who only use one method of birth control without becoming parents.