Kentuckians told the Lantern they got intrauterine devices, better known as IUDs, because of concern that they would lose ...
The massive study, which was conducted in Sweden and tracked more than 2 million teenage girls and women under age 50 for more than a decade, found that hormonal contraception remains safe overall, ...
When IUDs are inserted, health-care providers first put a speculum into the patient’s vagina, which widens the vaginal walls, and then a tenaculum — a scissor-like type of forceps — is used to ...
Researchers have demonstrated that PIEZO1 and PIEZO2 play key roles in sensing physical forces during childbirth.