Thanks for that horrifying thought, Satan.
Uh?
No, not Unilever Headquarters. Claire’s.
Whats claires
A mall store that does (famously unsanitary) ear piercings.
I long for a day when IUDs insertions are so safe, simple and routine and automated we can get them at a mall kiosk. As it is, Claire’s staff are not sufficiently trained to do clean ear piercings.
I long for the day that women are properly briefed on what the insertion process is like and that doctors give them sedatives for it. Everyone I know who has had one has said they love it but that the insertion process was much, much more painful than they had been told.
(To be clear, I’m agreeing with and expanding on your point)
I found mine fairly okay, without sedatives or numbing, but I was fortunate to be able to access a specialist genitourinary health centre and the doctor doing the procedure communicated well. A lot of the bad stories I’ve heard stem from inconsiderate or inept doctors.
This is just one anecdote from a doctor friend, but she firmly believes that sedatives or numbing should rarely be necessary if the person doing the procedure is good at it (and she says many in general practice aren’t good at it because they do it so infrequently and they also don’t care to learn more). Something notable is that my friend considered herself decent at fitting IUDs relative to other general practice doctors, but this conversation started when she told me about the optional supplementary training course she had paid for herself, to be better at it. She felt the extra training should be the minimum required.
I would have liked to have had the option of sedation though, with my IUD, even though it went fine. I asked about the possibility and I was told it wouldn’t be necessary and I was anxious at that point because I didn’t know whether my doctor was trustworthy, given the abundance of stories online where doctors are dismissive around IUD insertion pain.
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Hopefully not with an ear piercing gun. Yowch!