Monday, June 27, 2011

Can you get pregnant in the middle ages?

When you child or at least a step in your reproductive life where you can become pregnant accidentally, the threat of a real spelled rupture condom disaster. The very idea of this ship of fragile security fails and the spill of sperm in a cervix/vagina receptive was sufficient to induce many couples in the choice of the method of birth control protection commonly referred to as "double bagging."

Sperm, of course, can do more that just get a pregnant woman. Sperm is also how STD, sexually transmitted diseases, is reviewed, that is why he and other body fluids (including saliva, vaginal juices and secretions) must be controlled and contained. There is a kind of condom called a dental dam designed to protect a woman and her partner during oral sex, but the most common condoms are those even that you remember your youth, worn by the man on his penis. Condoms are cheap, easy to buy, to require no medical prescription and to work more than 90% of the time. But they sometimes break or tear, or even fall, particularly if during intercourse, the man did not maintain a strong erection.

Should you be concerned if this occurs? Yes and no. The blessing of most late-Middle-age sex is that the fear of pregnancy can be eliminated much unless you are still regularly your rules. If you think you can become pregnant, more the product of meter called after the pill provides emergency contraception. This pill requires no prescription and can be purchased in pharmacies. It can take up to five days (or 120 hours) after unprotected sex and is known to be safe and effective.

Accidental exposure to STDs is another matter and dangerous to this. Without danger, if there is a breach of condom, you and your partner both must be tested for STDs, including HIV, as soon as possible. (Rapid HIV tests can give you the results on the same day.) If you know that you have been exposed to HIV, your doctor will prescribe a PEP or post-exposure - "morning after" treatment for HIV which can prevent infection. The PEP treatment is a course of long months of a drug that is most effective when started immediately, but can still work up to 72 hours after exposure.

Read more about the framework: What happens if the Condom breaks?

Eve Marx wrote frequently about sex, health and relationships for ThirdAge.com.

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