Friday, October 12, 2007

Bactrim: Dual Label. Nurse Practitioner’s Role in Education and Provision

Health Care Providers Rarely Counsel Patients on Emergency Contraception


Although ACOG published guidelines for its members on the use of emergency contraception and encouraged its members to educate their patients, surveys indicate that most health care providers rarely prescribe emergency contraception or include emergency contraception in discussions about contraceptives ( Table 2 ).[19,20] Currently, only 25% of obstetric and gynecology specialists and 14% of general practitioners routinely counsel women about emergency contraception in advance of possible need.[11] Many physicians who do not prescribe emergency contraception to their patients hold the following beliefs: patients should be limited on the number of times they can use emergency contraception (58%), emergency contraception discourages use of precoital contraception methods (43%), and repeated doses of emergency contraception pose health risks (49%).[6] Printer- Friendly Email This

Journal for Nurse Practitioners. 2007;3(7):470-474. ©2007 Elsevier Science, Inc.
This is a part of article Bactrim: Dual Label. Nurse Practitioner’s Role in Education and Provision Taken from "Bactrim Information" Information Blog

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