HOW DIFFERENT CONTRACEPTIVES AFFECT FERTILITY

How Different Contraceptives Affect Fertility

Understanding your different options for contraceptives and their effects on fertility are important for successful family planning. If you plan to start a family in the future, you should choose a birth control method that lines up with your time table. While some contraceptives have no lasting effect on fertility, some have effects that last for a year or more. It’s important to consider these effects when deciding which contraceptive option is right for you.

Condoms and Diaphragms

Condoms and diaphragms, also referred to a barrier contraceptives, only take effect when they are in use. They have no long-term effect on male or female fertility, so as soon as you stop using them, there’s no barrier to conception.

Birth Control Pills

Many women and their partners worry that using oral birth control for a long time will negatively affect their fertility. Most studies, however, have found that birth control pills do not have an effect on long-term fertility. A 2010 study by the BU School of Public Health, found that “Women who have used for four years or more should be reassured because we found no evidence that long-term OC use deleteriously affects fecundability.” Oral birth control does, however, affect short-term fertility. If you are trying to conceive, you will need to plan on your body taking time to adjust after you stop taking birth control. Contraceptive pills contain estrogen and progesterone, hormones that also occur naturally in the body, which prevent normal ovulation. Normal ovulation cycles should restart as soon as one month after you start taking the pill, although for some women it can take between three months and a year.

IUDs

Intrauterine devices work by releasing a substance (either copper or a hormone called progestin) that prevents sperm from fertilizing an egg. Since IUDs don’t directly affect ovulation, women’s cycles typically return to normal within about a month. It usually takes a little longer for women to become pregnant; IUDs are thought to affect fertility for slightly longer than oral contraceptives. On average, it takes women about 11 months to become pregnant after having an IUD removed. Researchers do not believe there is any long-term effect on fertility.

Depo-Provera

Depo-Provera is a hormonal contraceptive that works much like birth control pills, except that the hormones are taken as an injection every three months. Because the hormones are injected into the muscles, they linger in your body and have long-lasting effects on fertility. Typically, the time it takes to return to default fertility is between 10 months and a year and a half. However, you may become pregnant as soon as three months after using Depo-Provera regularly. Because the injections take a long time to stop having an effect, you should not choose this method of contraceptive if you hope to get pregnant soon. CONCEIVE PLUS® Fertility support is an essential part of conception, whether you are just starting out or have been trying for some time. Regular lubricants are proven to have negative effects on the fertilization process and should be avoided when you are trying to conceive. BUY HERE