An Expert’s Look at Fertility Awareness Methods

What you should know if you’re considering this kind of contraception

Chelsea Polis
Elemental

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Credit: mikroman6/Getty

InIn 2018, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), for the first time, approved an app for use as a contraceptive method. The app, called Natural Cycles, uses an algorithm that aims to predict the days of the month a woman is likely to be fertile based on daily basal body temperature readings and menstrual cycle information (and optionally, results from a home test kit measuring luteinizing hormone in urine). The approval sparked conversation around how people are using fertility awareness-based methods (FABMs) to prevent pregnancy today, and what options are available to them.

Currently, only about 3% of women who use contraception in the U.S. use an FABM. And while there’s a misconception that “fertility awareness-based method” only means the rhythm method, the reality is that there are many different FABMs, some with more evidence than others.

These methods are based on the fact that sex can only lead to pregnancy during approximately six to nine days of each menstrual cycle, sometimes called the “fertile window.” FABM users track changes in one or more fertility signs — menstrual cycle dates, basal body temperature, cervical mucus or position, and hormone markers in urine — as a way…

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