New Permanent Birth Control Option

For years the only permanent birth control for women involved an invasive operation.
But now, there is a new type of contraception that can be done in minutes under local anesthesia.
 It's called Adiana.
 Doctors put a tiny insert, about the size of a grain of rice, into each fallopian tube.
 The body reacts by forming scar tissue around the insert, sealing off the tubes. “We place this little spongy material inside,” Dr. Jacques Moritz of Roosevelt Hospital in New York says, “Then the body forms scar tissue around the spongy material and just seals everything shut.”
 Just like getting your tubes tied this procedure can't be reversed.
 While the procedure only takes 15 minutes, it can take up to three months for the scar tissue to completely close of the fallopian tubes.