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Let’s Actually Talk About Birth Control

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    I'm Hillary, and I'm trying
    to understand birth control.
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    I recently asked a
    few high schoolers
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    what they knew about it.
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    I've never talked
    about birth control.
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    I'm a little bit unsure about
    what birth control even is.
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    I know that birth control
    is a pill that you take.
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    I don't really know
    anything about it, honestly.
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    And then I asked some of my
    coworkers what they knew.
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    I don't have a lot of experience
    talking or researching
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    or thinking about birth control.
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    I've never used birth control.
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    How did I learn
    about birth control?
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    I'd say I didn't.
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    I think this is what everyone
    thinks of as the most
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    basic form of birth control.
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    Somehow these magical tablets
    keep you from getting pregnant.
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    I don't know what's in it.
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    I feel like you've got to
    have some instructions.
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    How does this work?
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    Is it the coil that
    doesn't make you pregnant?
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    That's like magic.
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    How does it do that?
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    It turns out we all had
    a bunch of questions.
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    So I called in some experts.
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    I'm Dr. Regina Edmond.
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    I'm Dr. Yvonne Bohn,
    and we're OB/GYNs.
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    In order to understand
    birth control,
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    first you have to understand two
    basic concepts-- menstruation,
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    which is when the uterine
    lining sheds and a woman
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    bleeds monthly, and the
    second is ovulation.
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    That's when the ovary
    releases an egg.
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    So the way hormonal
    birth control works is it
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    prevents you from
    ovulating by interrupting
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    the signal from your brain.
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    You do not ovulate.
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    At the end of the
    cycle, the pills,
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    the hormones in the pills,
    or the lack of them,
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    causes you to have a, quote,
    "fake menstrual cycle."
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    Does birth control
    make you gain weight?
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    So when we're talking about
    birth control right now
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    we're talking about the combined
    birth control pills, the ones
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    you take every day.
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    The risk of weight gain
    with these types of pills
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    is extremely low.
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    If you're gaining more
    than five pounds then
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    you should let the doctor know.
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    What happens if I have one
    cigarette if I'm on the pill?
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    There is an increased
    risk of blood clots
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    if you're smoking while
    you take the pill.
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    If you're over 35, we absolutely
    do not want you to smoke.
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    This doesn't apply
    to smoking weed.
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    We really do not
    encourage cigarette use
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    at all for so many
    other reasons.
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    But if you're out one night
    and you have one cigarette,
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    you're probably going to be OK.
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    This is an IUD?
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    I'm really confused
    about this one.
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    I don't understand what this is.
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    This is a copper IUD.
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    As you can see, the device
    is lined with copper wire.
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    And the copper in the IUD is
    toxic to the sperm so the sperm
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    cannot fertilized egg.
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    It does not inhibit
    ovulation, and it does not
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    affect your menstrual cycle.
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    What will the effect of
    having been on birth control
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    for a decade be when I
    want to get pregnant?
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    Women always worry, they've
    been on the pill for 10 years,
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    how is that going to
    affect their fertility?
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    Are they going to be able to
    have a baby when they want to?
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    And the answer is yes.
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    Because of the low dose of
    most birth control pills,
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    there is little risk to future
    fertility after stopping.
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    Once you stop the pills or once
    you take your placebo pills,
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    within a very short
    period of time
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    the hormones that have
    regulated or prevented
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    your pregnancy will
    be gone, and you
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    should be able to resume a
    normal menstrual cycle very
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    quickly.
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    Sometimes as rapidly
    as in one month.
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    For other women it may
    take a little bit longer.
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    Why isn't there a dude pill?
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    We do have the male
    condom and vasectomy.
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    I don't see that there will be
    a hormonal form of contraception
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    for men because in order to
    help them stop producing sperm,
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    we would have to affect
    their testosterone levels,
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    and I don't think
    most men would be
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    willing to deal with the side
    effects of low testosterone.
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    I don't know which
    option to go with.
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    The best form of birth
    control is the one
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    that you'll remember to take.
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    Whatever you're using,
    it has to be consistent.
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    You have to be compliant.
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    So whether it's condoms, whether
    it's a diaphragm, whether it's
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    a pill that you take every
    day, or a ring that you
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    put in the vagina, you
    have to be compliant.
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    A lot of people
    take birth control
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    so that they don't get
    pregnant, but a lot of people
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    take birth control
    for other reasons too.
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    The hormones in
    the birth control
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    help to regulate your
    hormones so that you
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    have possibly less
    acne, less bleeding
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    when you have your
    menstrual cycle,
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    and possibly less cramping.
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    So we use it for
    medical problems too.
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    It seems like a lot of our
    confusion stems from the fact
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    that we hadn't really been
    talking about birth control.
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    I definitely think
    we should open up
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    the conversation
    about birth control
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    and it's many uses
    a lot earlier.
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    You can't be bashful.
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    You have to know what it is
    that you're putting inside
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    of your body.
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    Because otherwise you just hear
    about it through other people
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    and you don't really
    know what you're doing.
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    A lot of women are raised to
    be modest and to be ashamed.
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    And because of that,
    they really don't
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    understand what's going on
    in their body every month.
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    I think it's important
    that a lot of young girls
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    know more about it.
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    We think of birth control as a
    political thing or a religious,
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    not a religious thing,
    but so much of it
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    just has to do with
    women's bodies.
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    This should be
    open conversation.
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    It doesn't have to be so scary.
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    I think that if it
    were talked about more,
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    it wouldn't seem so wrong.
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    So let's actually talk
    about birth control.
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    Let's talk about birth control.
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    Let's talk about birth control.
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    Let's talk about birth control.
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    Let's talk about it.
  • 4:38 - 4:49
Title:
Let’s Actually Talk About Birth Control
Description:

Because we all have a lot of questions.

Like BuzzFeedVideo on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/18yCF0b

MUSIC
stbb258 Let It Go (refreshed) by Beatfux
https://soundcloud.com/beatfux/stbb258-let-it-go

FEATURING:

Dr. Yvonne Bohn
http://www.mommydocs.com/
http://www.laobgyns.com/
2001 Santa Monica Blvd.
Suite 970-W
Santa Monica, CA 90404
Phone: (310) 829-7878
Author of The Mommy Docs’ Ultimate Guide to Pregnancy and Birth available for purchase at http://www.amazon.com/Mommy-Ultimate-Guide-Pregnancy-Birth-ebook/dp/B004THDTA8/ref=dp_kinw_strp_1

Dr. Regina Edmond
http://www.reginaedmondmd.com/
8737 Beverly Blvd., Suite 201
West Hollywood, CA 90048
Phone: 310.659.4564

Franny Flackett-Levin
IG: @babiecorndog

Stella Mulroney
IG: @sunbear_enthusiast
Twitter: @mulroneystella

Tess Lafia
IG: @hotmessstess

Special thanks to Planned Parenthood for providing birth control samples
http://www.plannedparenthood.org/

MEDIA:

Condoms Hanging on a Clothesline
Keith Brofsky / Thinkstock.com

Birth Control Pills
Comstock / Thinkstock.com

Dancing girl silhouette
Mikesilent / Thinkstock.com

Green marijuana leaf
Yuliyan Velchev / Thinkstock.com

Paper arrows
Vjom / Thinkstock.com

Sperm Concept
RaStudio / Thinkstock.com

Film Footage courtesy of Shutterstock, Inc.
Used by Permission

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:50

English subtitles

Revisions