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Apex Nursing

Chart — Maternal-Newborn

Contraceptive Methods Comparison Chart

Every method, sorted by how it works, how effective it is in real-world (typical) use, whether it protects against STIs, and the one teaching point that matters most. Effectiveness rises as user-dependence falls.

Educational use only. Method selection and prescribing are provider-directed and follow current eligibility criteria. Effectiveness ranges describe typical use. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

MethodHow it worksEffectivenessSTI protectionKey teaching
IUD (hormonal or copper)Hormonal thickens mucus/thins lining; copper is spermicidal & hormone-freeMost effective (>99%)NoCheck strings; copper = also emergency contraception; report PAINS
Implant (etonogestrel)Progestin suppresses ovulation, thickens mucusMost effective (>99%)NoMost effective reversible method; irregular bleeding common
DMPA injectionProgestin suppresses ovulationVery effectiveNoReinject q11–13 wk; weight gain, reversible bone density loss
Combined pill / patch / ringEstrogen + progestin suppress ovulationEffective (typical use slips)NoEstrogen contraindications (smoker ≥35, clots, migraine w/ aura); ACHES; missed-pill rules
Progestin-only 'mini-pill'Thickens mucus; variable ovulation suppressionEffectiveNoTake at the SAME time daily; >3 hr late needs backup; OK if estrogen contraindicated
Male/female condomPhysical barrierModerate (typical use)YES (only method that protects)Dual protection; no oil-based lubricant with latex
Diaphragm / cervical capBarrier + spermicide at the cervixModerateNoMust be fitted; leave in ≥6 hr after sex; refit after weight/birth changes
Sterilization (tubal / vasectomy)Permanent occlusion of tubes / vas deferensMost effective (permanent)NoPermanent; vasectomy needs a confirmatory semen analysis before relying on it
Fertility awarenessAvoid intercourse in the fertile windowLeast effective (typical use)NoTrack mucus, BBT rise, calendar; depends on consistency

Exam Traps

  • Most effective = the methods that don't depend on the user: IUD, implant, and sterilization (LARC + permanent).
  • Condoms are the LEAST effective of the common methods but the ONLY one that prevents STIs — always reinforce dual protection.
  • Estrogen-containing methods are out for smokers ≥35, clot/stroke history, migraine with aura, and uncontrolled hypertension — choose progestin-only.
  • Copper IUD is the most effective emergency contraception (up to 5 days after).
  • Vasectomy isn't reliable until a follow-up semen analysis confirms azoospermia.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) · AWHONN · American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — newborn. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →