'Pulling out' gets new respect; study says it's not reproductive roulette. May 28, 2009— -- When sex researcher Rachel K. Jones published a report that suggests the much-maligned withdrawal ...
(Reuters Health) – Up to 17 percent of young adults in the U.S. may be using “withdrawal” to prevent pregnancy, although not necessarily relying just on that method, a new study finds. In the sample ...
However, a spate of recent articles and books suggest women are rejecting the pill in favor of other contraceptive measures, including the age-old (and often derided) withdrawal method. In her book ...
Additionally, since withdrawal doesn’t offer us the false sense of security other contraceptive methods often do, it has forced us to have frank conversations about what we would do if we had an ...
As the name implies, in pulling out, one partner takes his penis out of the other partner’s vagina before he ejaculates. By doing this, fewer sperm travel through the vagina and cervix. The male ...
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Many young women use the "pull-out method" for birth control, and they tend to have more unintended pregnancies than other women, a new study suggests. Researchers ...
Withdrawal is an old-fashioned, unreliable form of birth control, but one-third of young women still use it anyway, new research indicates. "Our study showed that use of withdrawal for contraception ...
The pull-out method is a form of birth control where the male partner withdraws his penis from the vagina before ejaculation. To use the pull-out method correctly, the male partner must have the ...