Intrauterine Device

Credit goes to Emma-Jade West for letting me use her idea of creating a webpage for my assignment. THANKS EM-J!!!! Link to Em-J's website

What is it? - An IUD is a small plastic and copper device which is inserted into the uterus to prevent pregnancy. It has catchment areas (number varies for different models/brands) along the side of the device and is only a few centimetres long, excluding attatched string.

IUD’s come in different sizes and shapes to cater for different uterus’s

The IUD prevents pregnancy by catching unfertilised egg or sperm moving up to fertilise the egg. IUD’s can also have a progesterone additive that thins the endometrium, so in the very slight chance that an egg implants itself on the endometrium, it cannot grow and dies off.

How is it used? - An IUD is inserted into the Uterus, via the Cervix. A doctor will use a speculum (small camera) to look inside the uterus and find the right size/shape IUD the uterus and determine if you are able to partake in the procedure.

It is very important a doctor performs the procedure, becuase if done incorrectly, it is possible to push the IUD through the wall of the uterus.

Contact your local doctor if you would like to carry out the procedure. Click here to e-mail your local GP