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  2. Estrogen patch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estrogen_patch

    An estrogen patch, or oestrogen patch, is a transdermal delivery system for estrogens such as estradiol and ethinylestradiol which can be used in menopausal hormone therapy, feminizing hormone therapy for transgender women, hormonal birth control, and other uses. [1]

  3. Combined hormonal contraception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combined_hormonal...

    Combined contraceptive patch [7] 120-150 μg of norelgestromin and 20-35 μg ethinyl estradiol daily [20] [21] [22] New patch used once a week, after 3 weeks patch is not worn to allow for withdrawal bleeding [19] Combined contraceptive vaginal ring [7] 120-150 μg etonogestrel and 13-15 μg ethinyl estradiol daily [20] [23] [24]

  4. Contraceptive patch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contraceptive_patch

    On November 10, 2005, Ortho McNeil, in conjunction with the FDA, revised the label for Ortho Evra, including a new bolded warning about higher exposure to estrogen for women using the weekly patch compared to taking a daily birth control pill containing 35 μg of estrogen, noting that higher levels of estrogen may put some women at increased ...

  5. Finally reached menopause? Here's what to expect next - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/finally-reached-menopause...

    Hormone replacement therapy: You can take a combination of estrogen and progesterone in patch or pill form, or it can be given vaginally, Tang says. You could also apply a cream or gel directly to ...

  6. Hormone Therapy Was Villainized For Decades. Now, It ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/hormone-therapy-villainized-decades...

    Therapy can take the form of an estrogen pill, skin patch, ring, gel, cream, or spray, and it usually includes a second hormone, progestogen, which can be either progesterone or a synthetic progestin.

  7. Norelgestromin/ethinylestradiol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norelgestromin/ethinylest...

    The patch-free interval must not be longer than seven days; otherwise, additional non-hormonal contraceptive methods must be used, such as condoms. [6] Transdermal patches must always be applied on the same day of the week to the buttock, abdomen (belly), upper arm or upper back. [ 6 ]