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Vidcast: https://youtu.be/pZYPwtzQhJs
Is your smartphone the final authority on the best time to have sex? Whether you want to get pregnant or avoid parenthood, the answer appears to be yes. Georgetown University’s Institute for Reproductive Health studied one app that can help you, the DOT Fertility Tracker, in over 700 women 18 to 39 years of age for up to one year of use.
They found that careful use of the app resulted in a 1% pregnancy rate. That’s as good or better than most forms of contraception including the pill, vaginal rings, condoms, and certainly the traditional low tech rhythm method.
The app tracks a woman’s cycle and predicts the risk of pregnancy for each day of that cycle. When a woman begins using the app, historical cycle data is applied. As the app accumulates more personal data on her, it becomes far more accurate.
If a woman consistently avoids unprotected sex on the days the DOT app predicts as fertile, she has a very cost-effective method of family planning. As you can tell, the method sadly precludes spontaneity. For that, you’ll need one of the old standbys: the condom, the diaphragm, or the cervical cap.
Georgetown University Medical Center. "Fertility app 'Dot' found to be as effective as other family planning methods." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 18 March 2019. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/03/190318132556.htm.
#contraception #app #smartphone #pregnancy #cycle #menstrualcycle
By Howard G. Smith MD, AMVidcast: https://youtu.be/pZYPwtzQhJs
Is your smartphone the final authority on the best time to have sex? Whether you want to get pregnant or avoid parenthood, the answer appears to be yes. Georgetown University’s Institute for Reproductive Health studied one app that can help you, the DOT Fertility Tracker, in over 700 women 18 to 39 years of age for up to one year of use.
They found that careful use of the app resulted in a 1% pregnancy rate. That’s as good or better than most forms of contraception including the pill, vaginal rings, condoms, and certainly the traditional low tech rhythm method.
The app tracks a woman’s cycle and predicts the risk of pregnancy for each day of that cycle. When a woman begins using the app, historical cycle data is applied. As the app accumulates more personal data on her, it becomes far more accurate.
If a woman consistently avoids unprotected sex on the days the DOT app predicts as fertile, she has a very cost-effective method of family planning. As you can tell, the method sadly precludes spontaneity. For that, you’ll need one of the old standbys: the condom, the diaphragm, or the cervical cap.
Georgetown University Medical Center. "Fertility app 'Dot' found to be as effective as other family planning methods." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 18 March 2019. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/03/190318132556.htm.
#contraception #app #smartphone #pregnancy #cycle #menstrualcycle