OBJECTIVE:
Contraceptive decision-making is an inherently personal process that is influenced by a multitude of factors both internal and external to the patient.1 The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recently reviewed these factors and recommended provision of contraceptive counseling in a manner that is patient centered and evidence based.2 Yet, although the document acknowledges that contraceptive “goals and needs change over time,” the existing literature has largely focused on contraceptive counseling and decision-making at one single point in time. However, major life events such as pregnancy can impact contraceptive choice.3 We sought to better understand the fluidity of contraceptive decision-making throughout pregnancy and the postpartum period.
STUDY DESIGN:
This is a planned secondary analysis of a retrospective chart review of 8654 patients who delivered at or beyond 20 weeks of gestation at a single, urban, teaching hospital in Ohio, between January 1, 2012 through December 31, 2014.4 Although the primary analysis focused on fulfillment of the desired permanent contraception, data abstracted from all deliveries form the basis of this analysis. Planned postpartum contraceptive method was recorded at 4 points during the obstetrical period—last plan documented in outpatient prenatal care, inpatient admission before or at delivery, last plan documented before hospital discharge postpartum, and plan at the outpatient postpartum visit. We analyzed contraceptive methods within the Center for Disease Control and Prevention―defined tiers of efficacy including tier 1 (permanent and long-acting reversible contraception), tier 2 (short-acting reversible methods including injectables, pills, patch, and vaginal ring), tier 3 (barrier methods, fertility awareness, withdrawal, and abstinence), none, and missing.
RESULTS:
A total of 12% of patients planned to use a contraceptive method postpartum with the same efficacy at each of these time points (Figure). Fewer patients desired highly effective methods of contraception at the time of outpatient postpartum visit when compared with the time of hospital discharge after delivery, although, overall, more patients wanted any contraceptive method at the postpartum visit than at other time points.
FIGURE.
Variation in efficacy of planned method of postpartum contraception
1—Permanent and long-acting reversible contraception.
2—Injectables, pills, patch, and vaginal ring.
3—Barrier methods, fertility awareness, withdrawal, and abstinence.
4—Missing.
Dec, declined; Postpart., postpartum.
Thornton. Fluidity in contraceptive decision-making. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2022.
CONCLUSION:
A major life event like childbirth may impact how a patient considers their choice of contraceptive methods. Given that more than two-thirds of patients in this study desired a postpartum contraceptive method with a different level of effectiveness than initially planned before delivery, there is likely even more fluidity in contraceptive method choice if we analyze methods individually rather than grouped within tiers of efficacy. Clinicians should incorporate this concept of fluidity in contraceptive decision-making into their contraceptive counseling.4 Although it is important to provide counseling based on the patient preferences and goals at the time of the encounter, clinicians should specifically be attentive to this normalcy in fluctuation and be aware that contraceptive decisions do not need to be static. Instead, as demonstrated by qualitative data, contraceptive decision-making is a dynamic process; thus, attention to fluidity in counseling is a crucial expression of reproductive justice.5
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by the Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative of Cleveland, by KL2TR0002547 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and NIH roadmap for Medical Research (K.S.A.). K.S.A. is currently funded by 1R01HD098127 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development branch of the NIH.
Footnotes
The authors report no conflict of interest.
This manuscript is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH.
Contributor Information
Madeline Thornton, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of North Carolina Hospitals, Chapel Hill, NC.
Mustafa Steven Ascha, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.
Kavita Shah Arora, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of North Carolina Hospitals, 101 Manning Dr., Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
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