Contraception Point-of-Care

2.1 for iPhone
Free
0

0 Ratings

Update Date

2023-08-05

Size

1.7 MB

Screenshots for iPhone

iPhone
Contraception Point-of-Care Description
Contraception Point-of-Care puts in clinicians’ and trainees’ hands a wealth of information to guide prompt and skillful provision of contraception care to women and couples. The app brings together information and guidance from Reproductive Health Access Project (RHAP), CDC, FDA prescribing information, and many other sources. The app is a collaboration between RHAP and UHS Wilson Family Medicine Residency faculty clinician Dr. Joshua Steinberg.

The app addresses such common questions as:
- can I start a patient on an IUD or Depo today? how?
- which birth control methods are unsafe for a patient with migraines? liver disease?
- what are various methods for emergency contraception and how do they compare?
- what are relative costs of each contraceptive option?
- do I have to overlap when switching from The Pill to Nexplanon? how?
- my patient is having breakthrough bleeding on her pill, how do I adjust the hormone doses?
- what are various natural family planning methods and how good are they?
- how can I compare all the available birth control methods? (STEPS criteria)

As the home screen screenshot shows, the resources in this app are: Medical Eligibility Criteria (contraindications) reference table, Quick Start Algorithms, table of Method Effectiveness, table of all OCP Formulations on the market and other non-pill hormonal formulations, guidance on How to Choose & Adjust OCP doses, STEPS criteria (safety, tolerability, efficacy, price, simplicity of regimen) for ALL contraceptive methods, focused STEPS comparative table for fertility awareness methods, focused STEPS comparative table for Emergency Contraception methods, guidance on how to switch methods, and a table of necessary exams and testing (prerequisites) before giving contraception.

This app is written and intended for practicing physicians like family physicians, internists, pediatricians, OB-Gyns, and women’s health clinicians of all kinds; and it is particularly useful for resident physician trainees and medical student trainees (and NP’s & PA’s) as they grow into expertise in contraceptive care. The app is NOT written for the lay public.

As an educator and clinician, I am interested in feedback and I would be grateful for guidance on improving the tool.
Contraception Point-of-Care 2.1 Update
2023-08-05
Updated contraceptive effectiveness on the effectiveness table and the STEPS table for the latest data from Trussell's Contraceptive Technology
More Information
Price:
Free
Version:
2.1
Size:
1.7 MB
Genre:
Medical
Update Date:
2023-08-05
Language:
English

Safe to Download

AppPure.com and the download link of this app are 100% safe. The download link of this app will be redirected to the official App Store site, thus the app is original and has not been modified in any way.

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2.1 2023-08-05
Updated contraceptive effectiveness on the effectiveness table and the STEPS table for the latest data from Trussell's Contraceptive Technology
2.0 2023-08-01
- updated Formulations table for clarity on progestins, added Norgestrel POP
- updated STEPS and EC STEPS table with progestin IUD content including head-to-head trial of progestin and copper IUD for EC
- updated Medical Eligibility table for latest changes from RHAP
1.9 2023-01-13
Reorganized OCP's by progestins. Progestin generations really aren't accurate (see ref in app) so now progestins are organized by individual hormone and rated for androgenicity. The material on "How to Choose-Adjust OCP" has also been updated for this change.
1.8 2022-03-05
Updated quick start algorithms new evidence on IUD's, updated formulations for OCP's for novel estrogen estetriol and novel progestin-only agent drospirenone.
1.7 2020-09-27
updated for spermicide contraceptive Phexxi
1.6 2020-09-04
Updated for the generic version of Nuvaring and the new Annovera ring
1.5 2020-05-05
updated for removal of Essure from the market, otherwise no changes
1.3 2017-04-18
Added guidance from CDC guideline on how to handle late or missed OCP's, a patch that falls off, forgetting to insert the next ring, etc. This was a suggestion from a clinician, so keep the feedback and suggestions coming!