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Basal body temperature for natural family planning

The basal body temperature method — a fertility awareness-based method — is a type of natural family planning. Your basal body temperature is your temperature when you’re fully at rest. Ovulation may cause a slight increase in basal body temperature.

You’ll be most fertile during the two to three days before your temperature rises. By tracking your basal body temperature each day, you may be able to predict when you’ll ovulate. This may help you determine when you’re most likely to conceive.

If you’re hoping to get pregnant, you can use the basal body temperature method to determine the best days to have sex. Similarly, if you’re hoping to avoid pregnancy, you can use the basal body temperature method to figure out which days to avoid unprotected sex.

The basal body temperature method alone may not provide enough warning time to effectively prevent pregnancy. Often, people use this method in combination with other fertility awareness-based methods for avoiding pregnancy.

Basal body temperature can be used as a way to predict fertility or as a part of a method of contraception, by helping you gauge the best days to have or avoid unprotected sex.

Tracking your basal body temperature for either fertility or contraception is inexpensive and doesn’t have any side effects. Some women may choose to use the basal body temperature method for religious reasons.

The basal body temperature method can also be used to detect pregnancy. Following ovulation, a rise in basal body temperature that lasts for 18 or more days may be an early indicator of pregnancy.

The basal body temperature method is often combined with the cervical mucus method of natural family planning, where you keep track of cervical secretions throughout the course of a menstrual cycle. You might also use an electronic fertility monitor to measure hormone levels in your urine, which can tell you which days you’re fertile. This combination of approaches is sometimes referred to as the symptothermal or symptohormonal method.

Using the basal body temperature method to promote fertility doesn’t pose any risks.

Likewise, using the basal body temperature method for birth control doesn’t pose any direct risks, but it doesn’t offer protection from sexually transmitted infections — and it’s one of the least effective natural family planning methods. As many as 1 in 4 women — maybe even more — who use fertility awareness-based methods to prevent pregnancy will become pregnant after one year of typical use.

Using the basal body temperature method along with another fertility awareness-based method for birth control may improve the method’s effectiveness. But, the method requires motivation and diligence. If you don’t want to conceive, you and your partner must avoid having sex or use a barrier method of contraception during your fertile days each month.

Tracking your basal body temperature doesn’t require special preparation. However, if you want to use the basal body temperature along with another fertility awareness-based method for birth control, consult your health care provider first if:

Keep in mind that your basal body temperature can be influenced by many factors, including:

To use the basal body temperature method:

Although there are numerous apps available for tracking menstrual cycles, only one is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for pregnancy prevention.

Natural Cycles uses an algorithm to calculate the days during your cycle when you’re more likely to be fertile. The app calculates your fertile days based on daily temperature readings as well as other information you input about your menstrual cycle.

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