Fertility returns to your baseline after removal of the IUD. Whether it's easy to get pregnant after removal depends on your fertility, not the IUD.
It's no harder to get pregnant after the copper IUD is removed than it is before the copper IUD was put in.
Yes. It is very well expected to have your protection terminated after you get the IUD removed. You can get the pregnancy in due course of time. IUD inserted by the qualified person are very safe method of contraception.
The doctor can't see if you are pregnant while inserting an IUD. Your health care provider will ask questions and probably do a urine pregnancy test to make sure that you are not getting an IUD when you are already pregnant.
Pregnancy on the IUD is unusual. Bleeding with the IUD is not a special sign of pregnancy. If you think you might be pregnant, take a pregnancy test.
No
You should remove your IUD if you want to get pregnant, if you are pregnant, or if its useful life is expired and it's time to replace it.
There is no special risk from getting pregnant right after you stop using the IUD.
A positive pregnancy test is the sign of pregnancy with an IUD.
Not likely but yes. My sister got pregnant with the IUD in and she had had it for over three years.
It's the same as the procedure to remove the IUD when you're not pregnant.
You should have your IUD removed at the end of its normal life, or when you want to get pregnant.
No, that wouldn't normally happen.
If the IUD was in the cervix, it couldn't work properly. If you're pregnant, the IUD must be removed, regardless of whether you want to continue the pregnancy. Then you can choose to continue or terminate the pregnancy. If you choose to terminate, you can have another IUD inserted after the abortion.