The percentage of 869 women in five countries capable of being taught to recognize the periovulatory cervical mucus symptom of the fertile period was determined in a prospective multicentre trial of the ovulation method of natural family planning. The women were ovulating, of proven fertility, represented a spectrum of cultures and socioeconomic levels, and ranged from illiteracy to having postgraduate education. In the first of three standard teaching cycles, 93% recorded on interpretable ovulatory mucus pattern. Eighty-eight per cent of subjects successfully completed the teaching phase; 7% discontinued for reasons other than pregnancy, including 1.3% who failed to learn the method. Forty-five subjects (5%) became pregnant during the average 3.1-cycle teaching phase. The average number of days of abstinence required by the rules of the method was 17 in the third teaching cycle (58.2% of the average cycle length). To what extent the findings of this study can be extended to other couples remains to be demonstrated.
WHO ovulation method prospective multicentre trial, Billings ovulation method teaching effectiveness, cervical mucus symptom recognition training, natural family planning multicultural teaching phase, ovulation method pregnancy rate teaching cycles, fertility awareness method learning curve illiteracy, periovulatory cervical mucus identification prospective study, natural family planning abstinence days required, WHO natural family planning five country trial, cervical mucus method dropout rate acceptability
PMID 7021189 7021189
Cite this article
World Health Organization (1981). A prospective multicentre trial of the ovulation method of natural family planning. I. The teaching phase. *Fertility and sterility*, *36*(2), 152-158.
World Health Organization. A prospective multicentre trial of the ovulation method of natural family planning. I. The teaching phase. Fertil Steril. 1981;36(2):152-158.
World Health Organization. "A prospective multicentre trial of the ovulation method of natural family planning. I. The teaching phase." *Fertility and sterility*, vol. 36, no. 2, 1981, pp. 152-158.
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Design: Retrospect...
Infertility > Assisted Reproductive Technology > IVF OutcomesPregnancy > Neonatal Outcomes > Birth Weight and Gestational AgeContraception/Comparison > ART vs Natural Conception > Sibling Studies
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