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  2. Birth control methods - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/a-z-topics/birth-control-methods

    Birth control (contraception) is any method, medicine, or device used to prevent pregnancy. Women can choose from many different types of birth control. Some work better than others at preventing pregnancy. The type of birth control you use depends on your health, your desire to have children now or in the future, and your need to prevent ...

  3. Emergency contraception - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/a-z-topics/emergency-contraception

    Emergency contraception. Emergency contraception can help keep you from getting pregnant if you had sex without using birth control or if your birth control method did not work. There are two types of FDA-approved emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs). Some ECPs can work when taken within five days of unprotected sex or when your birth control ...

  4. HIV prevention - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/hiv-and-aids/hiv-prevention

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, some prevention challenges are unique to women: 2. Women can pass HIV to their babies during pregnancy and birth and through breastfeeding. A woman's anatomy makes it easier to get HIV through sex compared with a man's anatomy.

  5. Preconception health - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/pregnancy/you-get-pregnant/preconception-health

    Preconception health is a woman's health before she becomes pregnant. It means knowing how health conditions and risk factors could affect a woman or her unborn baby if she becomes pregnant. For example, some foods, habits, and medicines can harm your baby — even before he or she is conceived. Some health problems, such as diabetes, also can ...

  6. Pregnancy and HIV - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/hiv-and-aids/living-hiv/pregnancy-and-hiv

    Pregnancy and HIV. A diagnosis of HIV does not mean you can't have children. But you can pass HIV to your baby during the pregnancy, while in labor, while giving birth, or by breastfeeding. The good news is that there are many ways to lower the risk of passing HIV to your unborn baby to almost zero. Expand All.

  7. Pregnancy - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/pregnancy

    Childbirth and beyond. Labor and birth. Recovering from birth. View more. The Office on Women's Health is grateful for the medical review by: John W. Schmitt, M.D., Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Virginia Medical School. All material contained on these pages are free of copyright restrictions and maybe ...

  8. 5 Things to Know About Hypertension in Pregnancy - Office on...

    www.womenshealth.gov/blog/5-things-know-about-hypertension-pregnancy

    Pregnant women with hypertension have about twice the risk of subsequent heart disease as pregnant women without hypertension. Children born to women with hypertension have a higher risk for hypertension themselves, 5 as well as an increased lifetime risk of dying from cardiovascular disease. 6,7. 2. Most pregnancy-related deaths stemming from ...

  9. Breast cancer prevention - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/cancer/breast-cancer/breast-cancer-prevention

    Breast cancer prevention. This content is reproduced from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Womenshealth.gov may syndicate (show) some content from other federal agencies' websites when these agencies already provide women-specific information on certain health topics and meet other standards of quality, currency, accuracy ...

  10. Polycystic ovary syndrome - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/a-z-topics/polycystic-ovary-syndrome

    Polycystic ovary syndrome. Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a health problem that affects 1 in 10 women of childbearing age. Women with PCOS have a hormonal imbalance and metabolism problems that may affect their overall health and appearance. PCOS is also a common and treatable cause of infertility. Expand All.

  11. Pregnancy complications - Office on Women's Health

    www.womenshealth.gov/pregnancy/youre-pregnant-now-what/pregnancy-complications

    Complications of pregnancy are health problems that occur during pregnancy. They can involve the mother's health, the baby's health, or both. Some women have health problems before they become pregnant that could lead to complications. Other problems arise during the pregnancy. Whether a complication is common or rare, there are ways to manage ...