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BBC Health 📅 11 Apr 2026 ⏱ 1 min read Women's Health

I’ve been a sex educator for six years. Why did I start doubting my contraception choices?

Misinformation about contraception has been spreading on social media, alongside the "very real frustrations" of women complaining about side effects.

ClinicaliQ Brief
  • Key Takeaways for Clinical Practice
  • Contraceptive misinformation is proliferating on social media, requiring GPs and sexual health clinicians to actively address myths and evidence-gap concerns during contraceptive counselling to maintain patient trust.
  • Patient-reported side effects warrant serious engagement, as women's legitimate frustrations about contraceptive tolerability are being amplified online; dismissing concerns risks driving patients toward unproven alternatives.
  • Healthcare providers must balance evidence-based recommendations with acknowledgment of real adverse effects, ensuring shared decision-making conversations include discussion of both efficacy data and documented side effect profiles to retain credibility.
Source Standfirst

Misinformation about contraception has been spreading on social media, alongside the "very real frustrations" of women complaining about side effects.

Why this is a brief, not a republished article

ClinicaliQ summarises and contextualises external updates for clinical awareness, then links to the original publisher for the full article and most current context.

Source
BBC Health
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