Female sterilization refers to the use of medication or surgery to block the fallopian tubes, allowing female friends to permanently prevent pregnancy. Previously, when implementing family planning, many regions required women who had already achieved their fertility goals to undergo sterilization. This contraceptive method is actually inhumane, so do women still need to undergo sterilization now?

1. After undergoing sterilization surgery, it is generally not unexpected to become pregnant. Previously, relevant departments urged sterilization, but now policies have changed. Whether female friends want to undergo sterilization or not is completely voluntary. If they want to do it, they can do it. If they don't want to do it, no one will force them.
2. Female sterilization is actually the process of blocking the fallopian tubes, including surgical sterilization and medication sterilization, both of which can create permanent contraceptive effects. If a woman who has undergone sterilization wants to have another child, she can only undergo tubal anastomosis to unblock the blocked fallopian tubes.
3. Although sterilization can achieve permanent contraception, there are also many disadvantages. For example, it is easy to suffer from gynecological diseases, lower back pain, menstrual disorders, and in severe cases, infections, which are extremely detrimental to women's physical health.
The contraceptive effect of sterilization is good, but it can cause significant harm to the body. Moreover, if one wishes to have another child in the future, it can be very troublesome and there is a possibility of permanent loss of fertility. Therefore, before choosing sterilization, careful consideration must be given.