Birth Control for Diabetics Bayside NY

This page provides useful content and local businesses that give access to Birth Control for Diabetics in Bayside, NY. You will find helpful, informative articles about Birth Control for Diabetics, including "Diabetes and Birth Control". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Bayside, NY that will answer all of your questions about Birth Control for Diabetics.

St. Mary''s Hospital For Children
(718) 281-8800
29-01 216th St
Bayside, NY
Rubin MD, David
13847 Horace Harding Expressway 2nd Floor
Flushing, NY
Project Samaritan, Inc.(HELP)
(718) 739-2800
89-31 161st St, Fifth Fl
Jamaica, NY
Clergy United for Community Empowerment, Inc.(CUE)
(718) 297-0720
89-31 161st St
Jamaica, NY
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Jamaica
(718) 262-5505
90-37 Parsons Blvd. 1st Floor
Jamaica, NY
Charles B Wang Community Health Center
(718) 886-1212
136-26 37th Ave Suite 2/F
Flushing, NY
Immunology Clinic
8268 164th St Bldg N, 8th Floor
Jamaica, NY
Hands In Victory
(718) 883-4944
Queens Hospital Center 8268 164th St., Building T
Jamaica, NY
AIDS Center of Queens County(ACQC)
(718) 896-2500
161-21 Jamaica Ave, 6th Fl
Jamaica, NY
AIDS Center of Queens County
(718) 739-2525
Jamaica Office 175-61 Hillside Ave, suite 403
Jamaica, NY
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Diabetes and Birth Control

Diabetic women of child-bearing age may well wonder if the birth control pill is a healthy option for them. The answer depends upon her age and her general health, experts say.

Young, healthy diabetic women should not have a problem with the birth control pill, says Millicent Comrie, MD, chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Long Island College Hospital in New York.

"However, if you have a very obese diabetic patient with end-stage diabetes and vascular damage, that woman is not a good candidate," Comrie explains. "And if she smokes or has high cholesterol, she also is not a good candidate. In this case, you are setting her up for problems."

All women who take oral contraceptives, especially smokers and those over age 35, have a very small risk of certain complications, says Bresta Miranda-Palma, MD, a practicing clinician at the Diabetes Research Institute in Florida. These include a slight risk of a blood clot and the possibility of an increased LDL, or "bad cholesterol." But these risks are much smaller than they once were since modern birth control pills contain much less estrogen than they used to. Many of the pills now on the market have 20 micrograms of estrogen, Comrie says.

Whether or not to go on the pill is a personal decision that is best made with your doctor. It's also a risk versus benefit situation. If a woman whose diabetes is not well controlled were to become pregnant, this could be dangerous for the unborn baby as well as for her.

"The risk of an unplanned pregnancy in a diabetic woman who is not in good blood sugar control is higher than the risk of using the pill," Miranda-Palma says.

If you decide that birth control pills are for you, there is absolutely no reason why you cannot stay on them until perimenopause, Comrie says. "Again, this advice is for diabetic women who do not smoke, who do not have an elevated cholesterol level, and who are not big drinkers," she says.

As for what birth control options are be...

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