Women’s Negative Experiences of IUD Procedures
Abstract
The use of Long-Acting Reversible Contraception has been steadily increasing due to the
promotion of its benefits as a contraception choice. The most used devices are the
levonorgestrel intrauterine system (IUS) and the copper intrauterine device (IUD). Studies
have found that women can experience pain and distress in procedures, but there has been
a lack of in-depth research to investigate this further. This study explores women’s negative
experiences of IUD procedures within UK based health settings. Twenty women took part in
semi-structured interviews about their experiences. Data were analysed using thematic
analysis and found six themes: (1) clinician interpersonal skills, (2) autonomy and
vulnerability, (3) pain experiences and pain management, (4) psychosocial impact, (5)
perception of clinicians and services and (6) gender roles and empowerment. The results
provided rich, in-depth accounts of what women can find distressing or painful and how this
can be mitigated in practice. Clinical implications include detailed assessment, empowering
patients, multi-modal pain management and recommendations for trauma informed practice.
Publication date
2024-10-24Funding
Default funderDefault project
Other links
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/28676Metadata
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