Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Because Birth Control Pills Were Supposed to Solve This Problem

One of the thing I find fascinating about the culture surrounding contraception is how it is oversold.

Remember when the advent of the Birth Control Pill was supposed to do away with the scourge of unwanted pregnancy?

Yeah, it's working so well, women are resorting to... withdrawal. As a back up.

From a study abstract:
OBJECTIVE:

Research assessing contraceptive use often focuses on the most effective method used and suggests that very few women rely on withdrawal. We adopted a new measurement strategy in an attempt to measure contraceptive practices and withdrawal in particular.

STUDY DESIGN:

We collected data from a national sample of 4634 US women aged 18-39; the survey was administered online in November and December 2012. We obtained information about recent use of hormonal methods and coital methods using two separate items, and we placed withdrawal first on the list of coital methods. The analysis examines several measures of withdrawal use in the last 30 days: most effective method used, any use, use with other methods and withdrawal "method mix."

RESULTS:

Among women at risk of unintended pregnancy, 13% reported that withdrawal was the most effective method used in the last 30 days, but 33% had used withdrawal at least once. Most women who used withdrawal had also used a hormonal or long-acting method (13% of the sample) or condoms (11%) in the last 30 days, and a minority reported using only withdrawal (12%). Younger women, women in dating relationships and women strongly motivated to avoid pregnancy had some of the highest levels of "dual" use of withdrawal with condoms or highly effective methods.

CONCLUSION:

Many women and couples in our sample used withdrawal in combination, or rotation, with condoms and highly effective methods. Findings suggest that some people who use withdrawal may be more versus less vigilant about pregnancy prevention.

IMPLICATIONS:

Health care providers who discuss contraception should include withdrawal in these conversations. A substantial minority of individuals has used it recently, and many appear to be using it as a backup or secondary method. If dual use were more widespread, it could help reduce the incidence of unintended pregnancy.


Everything old is new again.

Isn't the point or oral contraceptives to avoid having to use withdrawal?

I wonder what the pregnancy rate is among this population, and how it compares to the general population.