The Indiscriminate Use of an Emergency Contraceptive Pill in the Light of the Integrated Literature Review

Author:

Boas Dias Bruno Vilas1,Andrade da Silva Jaciara2,Virgens da Cruz Luciene das2,de Souza Antognetti Samanta2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing, Padre Anchieta University Center, Campo Limpo Paulista Faculty, Jundiaí-SP, Brazil

2. Department Scholars of Nursing, Padre Anchieta University Center, Jundiaí-SP, Brazil

Abstract

Objective: To identify through literature what has caused the indiscriminate use of emergency contraceptives. Method: Bibliographic study of articles published from 2013 to 2019, found in the databases; Bdenf, Lilacs and SciELO, with inclusion and exclusion criteria when 16 articles were selected. Results: The main factors pointed out by the study as a cause for the use of abortion pills were low education, disadvantaged family income with a minimum wage level equal to or less than three minimum wages and the untruthfulness of information acquired in basic health units. Conclusion: It highlights the need to terminate an unwanted pregnancy leading women to misuse of pills that can lead to miscarriage or cause greater harm to womens health who in addition to the pills also seek alternative services such as clandestine clinics to perform abortion and increasing the risk of death due to complications of the procedure.

Publisher

Edelweiss Publications Inc

Subject

General Medicine

Reference24 articles.

1. Moraes MST, Oliveira RC, Santos JM, Lucena Junior RP, Queiroz JRC, et al. Adverse effects on contraceptive implant users (2015) Femina 43.

2. Protocols of Primary Care: Womens Health. Ministry of Health, Syrian-Lebanese Institute of Education and Research (2016) Ministry of Health, Brazil.

3. Santos ACA, Rocha RDL, Nery IS and Silva JCP. Goodbye Hormones: Conceptions about body and contraception from the perspective of young women (2018) University of São Paulo, Brazil.

4. Brandão ER, Cabral CS, Ventura M, Oiava SP, Bastos LL, et al. Hormone bomb: risks of emergency contraception from the perspective of pharmacy attendants in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2016) Cad Saúde Pública Rio de Janeiro 32: e00136615. https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311x00136615

5. Patias ND and Dias ACG. First sexual intercourse, information and contraceptive use: a comparison between adolescents (2014) Psico-USF, Brag Pauli 19: 13-22.

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