Abstract

Wearable devices are more and more widely used in the field of smart healthcare. The purpose of this study was to explore the effect of contraceptive counseling and education on contraceptive behavior of women after induced abortion. The investigators will explain the situation of this topic to the respondents and select the respondents in strict accordance with the framework requirements of sampling design. All the data are from the induced abortion women in the first-, second-, and third-level hospitals, which reduces the selection bias of the respondents. It is found that the proportion of induced abortion among college students is the highest, reaching 66.03%. This study is helpful to reduce the incidence of unwanted pregnancy, induced abortion, and repeated abortion and improve the reproductive health of women.

Highlights

  • Wearable devices are more and more widely used in the field of smart healthcare

  • Sexual behavior is the basic link of ethnic continuity, and has the function of enjoyment, and is an important form of human life fun

  • Education on sexual ethics and sexual concepts should be strengthened for unmarried young people through multiple channels from schools, families, hospitals, communities, media, and relevant government departments, sexual and reproductive health information and services should be provided, safe, healthy, and responsible sexual behavior should be promoted, and scientific research should be conducted. e contraceptive guidance correctly guides teenagers to face their own behaviors and improve selfprotection awareness, thereby reducing the possibility of unmarried teenagers’ unintended pregnancy and fundamentally reducing the rate of miscarriage and reproductive tract diseases

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Summary

Introduction

Wearable devices are more and more widely used in the field of smart healthcare. It is the most natural physiological need. Ey studied Nepal’s legalization of abortion regulations in 2004 and subsequent expansion of abortion services, an unusual and quickly implemented policy that meets these requirements, using four waves of rich personal level data representing the age of conception of Nepalese women. Their findings have important implications for public policy and foreign aid, they did not propose effective strategies to reduce expensive and potentially unsafe abortions [4]. All the data are from the induced abortion women in the first-, second-, and third-level hospitals, which reduces the selection bias of the respondents

Women’s Contraception
Experiment on the Influence of Women’s Contraceptive Behavior
Investigation Implementation
Questionnaire Design
Women’s Contraceptive Behavior
Findings
Conclusion
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