PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Pregnancy after sterilization turns out to be surprisingly common

2024-08-27
(Press-News.org) Study led by UCSF estimates 3 to 5% of women have unplanned pregnancies following “permanent” sterilization  

Tubal sterilization is thought to be a permanent form of birth control and is the most common method of contraception nationally. But a new study led by UC San Francisco reports that tubal surgery fails often enough that some other forms of birth control are usually more effective.  
 
The authors found that 3 to 5% of women in the United States who had their tubes tied later reported an unplanned pregnancy. This failure rate led the authors to suggest that patients who really want to avoid future pregnancy should instead use a contraceptive arm implant or intrauterine device (IUD).  
 
The paper appears August 27 in NEJM Evidence.  
 
Interest in permanent contraception has risen since the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court Dobbs decision removed federal protections for abortion services and limited access to abortion services in many states. As a result, the researchers say that information about contraceptive effectiveness is especially important. 
 
“Since the Dobbs decision, many more people are worried about how pregnancy may impact their health and family life,” said first author Eleanor Bimla Schwarz, MD, chief of the UCSF Division of General Internal Medicine at Zuckerberg San Francisco General. “This is especially true for patients with medical conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure that can complicate pregnancy. 
 
“This study shows that tubal surgery cannot be considered the best way to prevent pregnancy,” Schwarz said. “People using a contraceptive arm implant or an IUD are less likely to become pregnant than those who have their tubes tied.”  
 
Many U.S. women get tubal surgeries  
 
About 65 percent of women 15 to 49 in the U.S. use birth control, according to national statistics, and tubal sterilization – an abdominal surgery in which the fallopian tubes are clamped or cut and removed – is used by more than 21% of women ages 30 to 39, and 39% of women older than 40. These surgeries are especially common among low-income people and those with chronic medical conditions. 
 
Tubal sterilization aims to permanently end fertility, but as previously reported, women can nonetheless get pregnant. Based on older studies, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has advised that fewer than 1% of patients become pregnant after tubal sterilization.  
 
In the new study, the authors examined four independent rounds of the National Survey of Family Growth from 2002 to 2015. Data were collected from more than 31,000 women, including 4,184 who reported having undergone tubal sterilization and were the focus of the study.  
 
Within the first year after tubal surgery, the researchers estimated that 2.9% of those who reported having been sterilized in 2013 to 2015 became pregnant. The chance of pregnancy was highest among those who were younger at the time of their tubal surgery.  
 
Patients who had Medicaid-funded procedures were not more likely than those with private insurance to become pregnant. In recent years, the proportion of respondents who reported a tubal sterilization funded by Medicaid has increased from 18% in 2002 to about 36% from 2013 to 2015.  
 
“When choosing what birth control will work best for them, people consider many different things including safety, convenience and how fast they can start to use the method,” Schwarz said. “For people who have chosen a ‘permanent’ method, learning they got pregnant can be very distressing. It turns out this is unfortunately a fairly common experience.”  
 
Authors: Besides Schwarz, authors are Amy Yunyu Ciang, PhD, of UCSF; Carrie A. Lewis, MPH, of the Center for Healthcare Policy and Research at UC Davis; Aileen M. Gariepy, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine at Cornell University; and Matt Reeves, MD, of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University. 
 
Funding: The paper was funded in part by an AHRQ R18 grant. The authors disclose no conflicts of interest. 

 

About UCSF: The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is exclusively focused on the health sciences and is dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. UCSF Health, which serves as UCSF's primary academic medical center, includes top-ranked specialty hospitals and other clinical programs, and has affiliations throughout the Bay Area. UCSF School of Medicine also has a regional campus in Fresno. Learn more at ucsf.edu, or see our Fact Sheet.

###

 

Follow UCSF
ucsf.edu | Facebook.com/ucsf | YouTube.com/ucsf

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mount Sinai Health System researcher receives $4 million grant from NIH to study the role of the mammary gland secretome in metabolic health

2024-08-27
New York, NY (August 27, 2024) – The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) Catalyst Award program has awarded a $4 million, five-year grant to Prashant Rajbhandari, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine (Endocrinology, Diabetes and Bone Disease) at the Mount Sinai Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism Institute, to investigate a new frontier in understanding metabolic diseases like obesity and type 2 diabetes. While much is known about how organs like the liver, fat tissue, and ...

UofL Green Heart Louisville Project study shows reduced inflammation in residents after adding trees to their neighborhoods

UofL Green Heart Louisville Project study shows reduced inflammation in residents after adding trees to their neighborhoods
2024-08-27
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The University of Louisville’s groundbreaking Green Heart Louisville Project has found that people living in neighborhoods where the number of trees and shrubs was more than doubled showed lower levels of a blood marker of inflammation than those living outside the planted areas. General inflammation is an important risk indicator for heart disease and other chronic diseases. The Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute launched the first-of-its-kind project in 2018 in partnership with The Nature ...

Biomimetic peripheral nerve stimulation promotes the rat hindlimb motion modulation in stepping: An experimental analysis

Biomimetic peripheral nerve stimulation promotes the rat hindlimb motion modulation in stepping: An experimental analysis
2024-08-27
A research paper by scientists at Beijing Institute of Technology presented a sciatic nerve stimulation method that will aid in lower extremity standing and stepping. The new research paper, published on Jul. 04 in the journal Cyborg and Bionic Systems, used the electrical nerve stimulation method and achieved muscle control via different sciatic nerve branches to facilitate the regulation of lower limb movements during stepping and standing. Peripheral nerve stimulation is an effective neuromodulation method in patients with lower extremity movement disorders caused by stroke, spinal cord injury, or other diseases. ...

The brain’s balancing system

2024-08-27
A finding by a McGill-led team of neuroscientists could open doors to new treatments for a range of psychiatric and neurological disorders attributed to dysfunctions in specific dopamine pathways. For those struggling with a psychiatric disorder such as schizophrenia, addiction or ADHD, or with neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s disease or Alzheimer’s, there might be good news ahead. The neuroscientists have discovered that a small group of dopamine neurons in the striatum play a crucial role in balancing several essential brain functions, including those related to reward, cognition and movement. Dopamine ...

Bubbling, frothing and sloshing: Long-hypothesized plasma instabilities finally observed

Bubbling, frothing and sloshing: Long-hypothesized plasma instabilities finally observed
2024-08-27
Whether between galaxies or within doughnut-shaped fusion devices known as tokamaks, the electrically charged fourth state of matter known as plasma regularly encounters powerful magnetic fields, changing shape and sloshing in space. Now, a new measurement technique using protons, subatomic particles that form the nuclei of atoms, has captured details of this sloshing for the first time, potentially providing insight into the formation of enormous plasma jets that stretch between the stars. Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) created ...

Brain research: Study shows what your favourite film genres reveal about your brain

2024-08-27
Crime films, action films, comedies, or documentaries? A person's favourite film genre reveals a lot about how their brain works. This is the finding of a new study led by the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) that compared data on film preferences with recordings of the brain activity of around 260 people. Fans of action films and comedies reacted very strongly to negative emotional stimuli, while participants who favoured documentaries or crime films and thrillers had a significantly weaker reaction. The results were published in the journal "Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience". Films are ...

Event horizon telescope makes highest-resolution black hole detections from Earth

Event horizon telescope makes highest-resolution black hole detections from Earth
2024-08-27
The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration has conducted test observations achieving the highest resolution ever obtained from the surface of the Earth, by detecting light from the centers of distant galaxies at a frequency of around 345 GHz. When combined with existing images of supermassive black holes at the hearts of M87 and Sgr A at the lower frequency of 230 GHz, these new results will not only make black hole photographs 50% crisper but also produce multi-color views of the region immediately outside the boundary of these cosmic beasts.  The new detections, led by scientists from the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) that ...

EHT scientists make highest-resolution observations yet from the surface of Earth

EHT scientists make highest-resolution observations yet from the surface of Earth
2024-08-27
The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration has conducted test observations, using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and other facilities, that achieved the highest resolution ever obtained from the surface of Earth [1]. They managed this feat by detecting light from distant galaxies at a frequency of around 345 GHz, equivalent to a wavelength of 0.87 mm. The Collaboration estimates that in future they will be able to make black hole images that are 50% more detailed than was possible before, bringing the region immediately outside the boundary of nearby supermassive black holes into sharper focus. They will also ...

A human-centered AI tool to improve sepsis management

2024-08-27
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A proposed artificial intelligence tool to support clinician decision-making about hospital patients at risk for sepsis has an unusual feature: accounting for its lack of certainty and suggesting what demographic data, vital signs and lab test results it needs to improve its predictive performance. The system, called SepsisLab, was developed based on feedback from doctors and nurses who treat patients in the emergency departments and ICUs where sepsis, the body’s overwhelming response to an infection, is most ...

MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O) seeks funding to continue expanding access to leading scholarship in 2025

2024-08-27
At the MIT Press, we believe that everyone deserves access to scholarship. Our dedication to this mission remains strong as we head into the fourth funding cycle for Direct to Open (D2O), our model for open access monographs. Libraries and consortia can commit to support the program through November 30, 2024. “Direct to Open is a game changer,” said Amy Brand, Director and Publisher at the MIT Press. “We know that open scholarship benefits authors, readers, and the academy at large. This is why we ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Stopping plants from passing viruses to their progeny

​​​​​​​NIH awards $2.8M to Rice, Baylor College of Medicine for research on acute respiratory distress syndrome

The University of Limpopo chooses Figshare to support its research excellence strategy

A new forecasting model based on gene activity predicts when Japan’s cherry buds awake from dormancy

New organic thermoelectric device that can harvest energy at room temperature

Activity in brain system that controls eye movements highlights importance of spatial thinking

New research reenvisions Earth’s mantle as a relatively uniform reservoir

Global warming leads to drier and hotter Amazon: reducing uncertainty in future rainforest carbon loss

Low-carbon ammonia offers green alternative for agriculture and hydrogen transport

New mechanism uncovered for the reduction of emu wings

Zeroing in on the genes that snakes use to produce venom

Maynooth University study reveals impact of homework on student achievement in maths and science

Reducing floodplain development doesn’t need to be complex

Lights, camera, action! Coronavirus spike proteins can be selectively detected in 5 minutes

Your Zoom background could influence how tired you feel after a video call

With the use of visual cues, hospital rooms get nearly 70% cleaner

Serial-autoencoder for personalized recommendation

How do look for microbes in nature that are beneficial to plant?

Exotic species invasions enhance biodiversity response to climate change

Arctic warming may fuel ice formation in clouds

Rugged Falklands landscape was once a lush rainforest

Dizziness in older adults is linked to higher risk of future falls

Triptans more effective than newer, more expensive migraine drugs

Iron given through the vein corrects iron deficiency anaemia in pregnant women faster and better than iron taken by mouth

The Lancet Neurology: Air pollution, high temperatures, and metabolic risk factors driving global increases in stroke, with latest figures estimating 12 million cases and over 7 million deaths from st

Incidence of neuroleptic malignant syndrome during antipsychotic treatment in children and youth

Levels of protection from different cycle helmets revealed by new ratings

Pupils with SEND continue to fall behind their peers

Half of heavier drinkers say calorie labels on alcohol would lead to a change in their drinking habits

Study first to link operating room design to shorter surgery

[Press-News.org] Pregnancy after sterilization turns out to be surprisingly common