“The IUD has an undeserved bad reputation both in the public and among physicians,” said Yen, who is also a clinical instructor in pediatrics at the medical school. “There’s the myth that they’re not appropriate for women who haven’t yet given birth, and the myth that they increase the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease.” The first myth, she said, is probably a vestige of early medical liability fears: Doctors wanted to make sure a woman had already had a baby to avoid possible lawsuits alleging that IUDs had rendered them infertile. Countering this myth, the authors highlight the 2006 British adaptation of World Health Organization Medical Eligibility Criteria for contraception, which states that previous IUD use is not associated with reduced fertility.
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