Women in ancient Greece often wrapped linen on wood and used it as a tampon.
Catheter tampons were invented by Dr. Earl Haas in Denver, USA in 1929, 193 1 patent, 1936 was listed in the United States. Another way to put it, tampons were designed by a gynecologist in West Germany at 1950. Because the use of tampons does not affect clothing and exercise, it has been favored by many people, and women in Europe and America use it more. Women in Asian countries seldom use tampons because Asians are not used to suppositories.
Now we will teach you how to use tampons.
Teaching difficulty: simple
Required items: tampons and vaseline.
The first step is to buy suitable tampons according to your menstrual flow (less, middle and more).
Step two, wash your hands with warm water and soap.
Step 3: Take out the tampon from the package.
Step 4, put the inner tube of the tampon into the body, about a few inches, not too deep. Hands must reach the outer tube.
Step 5, push the inner tube forward and push the tampon into the vagina.
Step 6: Take out the catheter (outer tube and inner tube) together.
The seventh step is to leave the thread attached to the tampon outside the vagina.
Step 8: Wrap the catheter in toilet paper and throw it into the trash can. Never flush it down the toilet.
Tips and suggestions: Use cotton strips that meet your minimum flow requirements.
Put the tampon into the vagina slowly, without force.
In the first few days of menstruation, it is best to use it with pads.
There are instructions on the packaging of tampons. You must read first.
If the tampon cannot be inserted smoothly, use a small amount of lubricant.
You won't feel the tampon in your body. If you feel this way, it proves that you are not deep enough. Take it out and put it back in a new tampon. Before pushing the inner tube from the outer tube into the vagina, put the outer tube into the vagina as gently as possible.
To prevent leakage, replace it every 4-8 hours.
To prevent toxic shock syndrome, do not leave tampons in the vagina for more than 8 hours.
If you have any questions, please ask your doctor or consultant immediately.
Cellophane packaging: Before use, wash your hands, tear off the seal on the tampon, remove the cellophane at the tail end, then loosen the cotton thread, hold the tail end of the tampon with one hand, and remove the cellophane at the tip with the other hand, then put the tampon into the vagina and push it in at about two knuckles to expose the cotton thread.
A component of catheter tampon. The one on the left is the outer tube. In the middle, the cotton sliver itself is connected with the cotton thread (pull rope). The one on the right is the inner tube. Catheter packaging: this packaging tampon is completely wrapped in the catheter, so you don't have to worry about hand contact pollution. When in use, that front end of the out tube of the catheter is contacted with the vaginal orifice, the inn tube is pushed forward, the tampon is pushed into the vagina in a way similar to injection, and then the catheter (the outer tube and the inn tube) are taken out together.
The tampon placed in the vagina can have three postures: sitting posture, standing posture with slightly bent feet and standing posture with one foot astride the chair. The purpose is to make the vaginal opening slightly open and the tampon can be placed smoothly. If it can't be inserted smoothly, you can change the push angle slightly, and you can push it smoothly. If you feel the presence of tampons when walking and moving, it means that the depth of insertion is not enough, and you can put it deeper.
When you take it out, just pull the tampon out with cotton thread (pull rope). If you can't find the cotton thread, you can forcibly push the tampon out of the body. If you can't get the tampon out of your body smoothly, please ask a professional doctor for help as soon as possible.