
INJECTABLE CONTRACEPTIVES are convenient, private, and very effective. This guide will
help you, the family planning provider, tell your clients about the 3-month injectable called
Depo-Provera® (DMPA) or the 2-month injectable called Noristerat®
(NET EN).
Counseling is a step-by- step discussion between you and the client. Counseling helps each client
choose and use the family planning method that best suits that person’s needs. Good counseling
involves friendly, open talk with the client to find out politely what she wants and what concerns
her.
The letters in the word GATHER stand for the steps in counseling a client about choosing a
family planning method:
| G | Greet
clients |
| A | Ask clients about
themselves |
| T | Tell clients about
available methods including injectables |
| H | Help clients choose
a method |
| E | Explain how to use
that method |
| R | Return visits
should be planned | |
| G |
GREET clients politely.
Ask how you can help. |
| A |
ASK clients about themselves.
Find out their family planning needs and concerns. Help clients to express
themselves. Ask if certain family planning methods interest them. |
| T |
TELL clients interested in injectables these
facts:
- Depo-Provera and Noristerat involve
an injection every few months—3 months with Depo-Provera, 2 months with
Noristerat.
- Both injectables prevent pregnancy very well.
- Both change vaginal bleeding for most women—often more bleeding or irregular bleeding at
first and then no bleeding at all after a year. These changes are not harmful. They are not signs of
serious health problems or pregnancy.
- Most women gain weight while using injectables.
- Some women notice headaches, dizziness, breast tenderness, moodiness, nausea, or acne.
Less than one-quarter of women report any of these side effects, and more than three-quarters do
not.
- Women who use injectables can become pregnant when they stop having injections.
Becoming pregnant may take several months longer than usual, however.
- Does a woman need protection against AIDS or other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)?
Then she should use condoms whether or not she chooses injectables. If her partner will not use
condoms, she should use spermicides.
|
| H |
HELP clients choose a method that suits
them.
Reasons to choose Depo-Provera or
noristerat:
- Very effective for several months at a time.
- Easy to use.
- Private.
- Can be used while breastfeeding.
- Helps prevent anemia (low iron in blood), ectopic pregnancy (outside the womb), cancer of
the endometrium (lining of womb), and sickle-cell crises. Also may help prevent cancer of the
ovary and epileptic seizures.
Note: Women of any age, women who have had children, and
women who have not had children can use Depo-Provera or
Noristerat. Also, women with epilepsy, uncomplicated diabetes, tuberculosis,
headaches, varicose veins, or venous thromboembolism (blood clots in the leg) can use
Depo-Provera and Noristerat.
Reasons to choose another method:
- Would not want vaginal bleeding changes or weight gain.
- Wants pregnancy in next 6 months.
- Cannot get injections every 2 or 3 months.
- Has certain medical conditions:
- Likely pregnancy
- Unexplained heavy vaginal bleeding suggesting pregnancy or a serious underlying condition
- Current breast cancer
- Past breast cancer*
- Severe high blood pressure*
- Heart disease due to blocked arteries*
- Diabetes with complications involving the circulatory system*
- Hepatitis with symptoms; severe cirrhosis; liver tumors*
- Had a stroke*
*A nurse or doctor can decide whether exceptions can be made in
individual cases. |
| E |
EXPLAIN how to use Depo-Provera or
Noristerat.
When to start. A woman can start Depo-Provera or
Noristerat:
- Any time that you, the provider, can be reasonably sure that she is not pregnant—for
example, within the first 7 days after menstrual bleeding starts, or at any other time if she has not
had unprotected sex since her last normal menstrual period. No pregnancy test is needed.
- Right after childbirth if she is not breastfeeding or if she is giving the baby other food or
liquid along with breast milk. If possible,waiting for 6 weeks would be better.
- Right after an abortion.
- If a woman cannot have her first injection now, she should use another family planning
method or not have sex until you can be reasonably sure that she is not pregnant. If needed, give
her condoms or spermicide and explain how to use them.
Explain the injection procedure.
- Antiseptic is rubbed on the skin.
- The injection is given in the arm or buttock with a sterile or disinfected needle and syringe.
- The client should not rub the injection site. This could shorten
effectiveness.
|
| R |
RETURN for follow-up should be
planned.
Tell the client when and where to come for the next
injections:
- For Depo-Provera: In 3 months and every 3 months.
- For Noristerat: In 2 months and every 2 months.
- Urge the client to come back on time if possible but to come back even if she is late.
If a woman is more than 2 weeks late for Depo-Provera or more than 1 week late
for Noristerat, she should use condoms or spermicide or else avoid sex. When you
are reasonably sure that she is not pregnant, she can have her injection. She can come back up to
4 weeks early for Depo-Provera and up to 2 weeks early for
Noristerat.
Discuss these reasons to come back at any time:
- Any questions or problems.
- Injection site is sore for more than 2 days or is bleeding or leaking pus.
- Very heavy or long vaginal bleeding (twice as long or twice as much as usual).
- Severe, repeated headaches with trouble seeing, speaking, or
moving.
|
This box can be copied and
given to the client who chooses Depo-Provera.
| Important Information
About (DMPA) Injectable Contraceptive |
| Effective, safe, easy to use, and
reversible. |
Depo-Provera injectable contraceptive offers almost
complete protection from pregnancy and has been proved safe. When you stop your injections,
you can get pregnant—usually not right away but 6 to 12 months later.
Depo-Provera does not prevent sexually transmitted diseases including
AIDS. |
| Vaginal bleeding changes. |
After the first several injections you will probably have more vaginal
bleeding or bleeding at unexpected times. Later, you will probably have little vaginal bleeding or
none at all. These changes are not harmful. They do
not mean that you are pregnant or sick. They do not mean that bad
blood is building up inside you. Also, you may gain weight when you use
Depo-Provera. This also is not harmful. |
| Next injection in 3 months. |
Come back for an injection every 3 months. Try to come in on time.
You can have the next injection up to 4 weeks early or up to 2 weeks late. But come back even if
you are more than 2 weeks late. |
| Please come back... |
- For your next injection or another family planning method.
- If you develop extremely heavy bleeding (twice as much or twice as long as normal for you)
or
long-lasting soreness and redness where you had an injection.
- Any time you have any questions, problems, or
concerns.
|
For a full explanation of the “GATHER” counseling process see
Population Reports, Counseling Guide, J-36, December
1987.
Sources: Hatcher et al. (116), Program for International Training in Health (259), Technical
Guidance Working Group (299), World Health Organization (332).
More copies of this “Population Reports GATHER Approach to
Counseling about Injectables (Depo-Provera and Noristerat)” can be
obtained from the Population Information Program, The Johns Hopkins Center for
Communication Programs, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, MD 21202-4012, USA; fax:
(410) 659-6266.
Supplement to Population Reports, New Era for
Injectables, K-5, Vol. XXIII, No. 2, August
1995. |