1. Clinical practice guidelines for contraception by the French National College of Gynecologists and Obstetricians (CNGOF).
- Author
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Chabbert-Buffet N, Marret H, Agostini A, Cardinale C, Hamdaoui N, Hassoun D, Jonville-Bera AP, Lambert M, Linet T, Pienkowski C, Plu-Bureau G, Pragout D, Robin G, Jablonski CR, Schefler M, Vidal F, Vigoureux S, and Hédon B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Contraception, Postcoital methods, Contraception, Postcoital standards, Female, France, Gynecology methods, Humans, Intrauterine Devices standards, Male, Obstetrics methods, Pregnancy, Societies, Medical organization & administration, Societies, Medical standards, Contraception methods, Contraception standards, Gynecology standards, Obstetrics standards
- Abstract
The French College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (CNGOF) has released its first comprehensive recommendations for clinical practices in contraception, to provide physicians with an updated synthesis of the available data as a basis for their practice. The organizing committee and the working group adopted the objective methodological principles defined by the French Authority for Health (HAS) and selected 12 themes relevant to medical professionals' clinical practices concerning contraception. The available literature was screened through December 2017 and served as the basis of 12 texts, reviewed by experts and physicians from public and private practices, with experience in this field. These texts enabled us to develop evidence based, graded recommendations. Male and female sterilization, as well as the use of hormonal treatments not authorized for contraception ("off-label") were excluded from the scope of our review. Specific practical recommendations are provided for the management of contraception prescription, patient information concerning effectiveness, risks, and benefits of the different methods, patient follow-up, intrauterine contraception, emergency contraception, local and natural methods, contraception in teenagers, in women after 40, for women at high thromboembolism or cardiovascular risk, and for those at of primary cancer or relapse. The short- and mid-term future of contraception depends mainly on improving the use of currently available methods. This includes reinforced information for users and increased access to contraception for women, regardless of their social and clinical contexts. The objective of these guidelines is to aid in enabling this improvement., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
- Published
- 2019
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