Table 2.
Theme | Description | N |
---|---|---|
Planned Pregnancy | ||
Decision-making | Deciding to pursue a pregnancy before the pregnancy happens, often involving communication between two partners. |
40 |
Preparedness/readiness to parent | Feeling ready to have a(nother) child, including financial preparedness, completion of schooling, and being in a stable relationship. |
38 |
Actively trying | Actions taken in order to get pregnant, including stopping contraception, changing health behaviors, and tracking fertility. |
34 |
Unplanned Pregnancy | ||
Contraceptive Failure | Pregnancies that happen as a result of a contraceptive failures, such as a condom breaking or inconsistent contraceptive use. |
33 |
Surprise | Pregnancies that are unexpected or have an element of surprise. |
29 |
In-Between Planned and Unplanned | ||
Okay becoming or getting partner pregnant | When a pregnancy is not desired or actively planned, but would be a welcomed thing in someone’s life. |
23 |
“Not not trying” | When one is not taking steps to become pregnant but also not taking steps to prevent a pregnancy. |
12 |
Nothing in-between | The belief that there is no status in between planned and unplanned pregnancy. |
29 |
Context-dependent definitions of pregnancy planning | ||
Preparedness/readiness to parent | More participants who had experienced unplanned pregnancy described preparedness when describing pregnancy planning compared to participants with no history of unplanned pregnancy |
38 |
Timing | Mostly students or college graduates described a timing aspect to pregnancy planning |
12 |
Fatalism | Some participants, mostly men, did not feel that it was possible to plan a pregnancy. |
6 |
Pregnancy just happens | Some participants, mostly men, felt that pregnancies can happen to anyone. |
5 |