Americans are waking to the possibility of a crackdown on reproductive rights in light of a Trump-Pence presidency.

if you have any questions about IUDs, i'm very serious you can DM me.

Benoit told The Intercept that more than two dozen women reached out to her for advice about the IUD, a small device inserted into the uterus that, depending on the type, works for three to 12 years. “I recommend the IUD right now especially because it’s long term, which with 20 million+ Americans potentially losing their health insurance and potentially right to an abortion, is important,” she said.

IF YOU CAN GET PREGNANT: TRY TO GET AN IUD IN THE NEXT 70 DAYS WHILE YOU ARE STILL COVERED.

Any other women looking into getting an IUD before we have no authority over our own bodies or reproductive rights? I know I am.

It's a good thing I'm going to change my birth control to a IUD this week. It will outlast trump.

“I’m terribly worried about the status of reproductive rights,” Bella Mazzetti, a sexual health advocate, told The Intercept. “If [Republicans] are telling me what to do with my body, my uterus, without having experienced the same pain and health issues as women, that is them saying they know best. In this case, that is not true,” she said.

President-elect Donald Trump has been accused by a dozen women of sexual assault and harassment and was caught on tape bragging about sexual assault. In the final presidential debate, Trump said Roe v. Wade would be overturned “automatically.”

Mike Pence, Trump’s running mate, introduced the first amendment to defund Planned Parenthood in Congress in 2007. He also co-sponsored a bill that sought to redefine rape, distinguishing between “forcible” rape and other kinds. This year, Pence signed an anti-abortion bill in Indiana that mandated funerals for all fetuses — it was struck down after a judge found it unconstitutional.

Trump also said he would repeal the Affordable Care Act, although what he would replace it with is unclear.