Gynopedia needs your support! Please consider contributing content, translating a page, or making a donation today. With your support, we can sustain and expand the website. Gynopedia has no corporate sponsors or advertisers. Your support is crucial and deeply appreciated.
Translations:Seoul/10/en: Difference between revisions
(Importing a new version from external source) |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 15:25, 24 June 2017
According to a 2015 UN report, it was found that 78.7%% of South Korean women (who were married/in unions and of reproductive age) used some form contraception. The most common methods were condoms (23.9%), male sterilization (16.5%), IUDs (12.6%), the rhythm method (9.7%) and female sterilization (5.8%).[1] Meanwhile, the usage of birth control pills by South Korean was very low, with estimates ranging between 2%[2] and 2.8%.[3] Many men and women also underwent the forced sterilization programs of the 1970s and 1980s.[4]