merrily234
New member
Editing my post to add this VERY important point that should not get lost in the noise: birth control is overwhelmingly safe and effective. It has empowered women/people with uteruses to chart their own futures and offered a level of agency over our lives that was previously unimaginable. American women in particular should be fighting to keep birth control LEGAL, affordable, and easily accessible. Don’t be afraid to advocate for yourselves at the OB/GYN’s office, but resist the urge to get swept up in mis/disinformation. And definitely don’t trust anyone who is disparaging bc while also trying to sell you something. Also, check out aidaccess.org if your bc fails and you live in a red state.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2024/03/21/stopping-birth-control-misinformation/
I just read this Washington Post article about birth control misinformation and wanted to hear what others think.
For the record, I fully support people using birth control and think there should be even easier access. I’m pro-choice. I’m on hormonal birth control myself. I’m also not exposed to any right-wing media and I don’t use TikTok.
But what the hell? This article makes it seem like any complaint about birth control side effects is just the result of some misinformation campaign. Women already have a hard enough time convincing doctors to believe us in any medical setting, and we all know it’s even worse for reproductive care. Articles like this diminish our ability to advocate for ourselves even more.
Look, I know there are misinformation campaigns about birth control driven by a bizarre conservative obsession with women and their bodies. And those are bad! But dismissing concerns about very real side effects completely? Not the answer. Two things can be true at once: 1) bad actors spread lies about birth control and scam people out of money through fearmongering and false promises about hormones/health, AND 2) we deserve to be taken seriously when we have questions/concerns about any medication, birth control included.
Also this little part annoyed me because fear about the pain of an IUD insertion isn’t just a gen z “trend.” Shit hurts. “Jenny Wu, an OB/GYN resident at Duke University, noticed that her Gen Z patients were turning away from IUDs at higher rates than her millennial patients — and were referencing TikToks about the pain of IUD insertion. So she analyzed the 100 most popular TikTok videos about IUDs and found that a surprisingly high proportion — almost 40 percent — were negative.
‘It’s changed how I practice,’ she said. She now routinely offers patients a variety of pain management options including anti-inflammatory drugs, a lidocaine injection into the cervix, or anti-anxiety medication.”
Anyway, thanks for joining my rant.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2024/03/21/stopping-birth-control-misinformation/
I just read this Washington Post article about birth control misinformation and wanted to hear what others think.
For the record, I fully support people using birth control and think there should be even easier access. I’m pro-choice. I’m on hormonal birth control myself. I’m also not exposed to any right-wing media and I don’t use TikTok.
But what the hell? This article makes it seem like any complaint about birth control side effects is just the result of some misinformation campaign. Women already have a hard enough time convincing doctors to believe us in any medical setting, and we all know it’s even worse for reproductive care. Articles like this diminish our ability to advocate for ourselves even more.
Look, I know there are misinformation campaigns about birth control driven by a bizarre conservative obsession with women and their bodies. And those are bad! But dismissing concerns about very real side effects completely? Not the answer. Two things can be true at once: 1) bad actors spread lies about birth control and scam people out of money through fearmongering and false promises about hormones/health, AND 2) we deserve to be taken seriously when we have questions/concerns about any medication, birth control included.
Also this little part annoyed me because fear about the pain of an IUD insertion isn’t just a gen z “trend.” Shit hurts. “Jenny Wu, an OB/GYN resident at Duke University, noticed that her Gen Z patients were turning away from IUDs at higher rates than her millennial patients — and were referencing TikToks about the pain of IUD insertion. So she analyzed the 100 most popular TikTok videos about IUDs and found that a surprisingly high proportion — almost 40 percent — were negative.
‘It’s changed how I practice,’ she said. She now routinely offers patients a variety of pain management options including anti-inflammatory drugs, a lidocaine injection into the cervix, or anti-anxiety medication.”
Anyway, thanks for joining my rant.