Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Contraceptive method use in the United States: trends and characteristics between 2008, 2012 and 2014

435

Citations

25

References

2017

Year

TLDR

The study examined levels, correlates, and changes in contraceptive use among U.S. women aged 15–44 from 2008 to 2014. Using three rounds of the National Survey of Family Growth and logistic regression, the authors analyzed data from 12,279, 5,601, and 5,699 women to assess demographic associations with contraceptive use and trend changes.

Abstract

ObjectiveThe objective was to examine levels of, correlates of and changes in the use of individual and grouped methods of contraception among US females aged 15–44 from 2008 to 2014.Study designUsing three rounds of the National Survey of Family Growth, we analyzed samples of 12,279 (2008), 5601 (2012) and 5699 (2014) females. We conducted simple and multivariable logistic regression analyses to identify associations between demographic characteristics and contraceptive use, as well as between characteristics and changes in use patterns.ResultsIn terms of overall trends in contraceptive use between 2008 and 2014, there was no significant change in the proportion of women who used a method among either all women (60%) or those at risk of unintended pregnancy (90%). Significant changes in use occurred among six methods. The largest increase in use was among users of long-acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) methods, including the intrauterine device and implant — from 6% to 14% — across almost all population groups of female contraceptive users, while the largest decrease occurred among users of sterilization — from 37% to 28% — with lower-income women driving the decline in female sterilization and higher-income women driving the decline in a partner's sterilization as a primary method. Moderate increases were seen in the use of withdrawal and natural family planning.ConclusionMost shifts in recent contraceptive use have occurred among the most effective methods — sterilization and LARCs. Differences in method-specific user characteristics underscore the importance of ensuring full access to the broad range of methods available.ImplicationsThe lack of change in the overall use of contraceptives among women at risk for unintended pregnancy may have implications for the extent to which further declines in national rates of unintended pregnancy can be expected.

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