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By William T. Elliott, MD, FACP, and James Chan, PharmD, PhD
Dr. Elliott is Chair, Formulary Committee, Northern California Kaiser Permanente; Asst. Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco; Dr. Chan is Pharmacy Quality and Outcomes Manager, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CA
Drs. Chan and Elliott report no financial relationships to this field of study.
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The young woman sitting in front of you is in good health and says she would like to use a birth control pill. Which pill do you prescribe?
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As you check the chart of a new patient, you note that she has previously experienced nausea on birth control pills, but cant remember the brand name of her prescribed oral contraceptive (OC). She would like to re-establish pill use. Which OC will you suggest?
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On Aug. 26, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced that it would indefinitely postpone its decision to allow nonprescription status for the emergency contraceptive pill Plan B popularly known as the morning-after pill.
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As you review the list of contraceptive options available at your family planning facility with your next female patient, which one most likely will receive the nod from her?
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More women are choosing long-term birth control through use of intrauterine contraception, say participants in the 2005 Contraceptive Technology Update Contraception Survey.
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Rewind to November 2004: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announces the addition of a black box warning to the labeling for the injectable contraceptive depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA, Depo-Provera, Pfizer, New York City and MedroxyPROGESTERone Injection, Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, North Wales, PA).
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Bacterial resistance to antibiotic treatment has concerned the medical community since the introduction of the first antibiotics in the 1920s. Development of new anti-infective agents has been precipitated by increasing resistance to older agents and classes of agents.
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