Departments of Family and Community Medicine; Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences; and Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA.
Center for Research on Health Care Data Center and Division of General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2014 Jun;210(6):526.e1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2014.01.037. Epub 2014 Feb 1.
Disparities in unintended pregnancy in the United States are related, in part, to black and Hispanic women being overall less likely to use effective contraceptive methods. However, the fact that these same groups are more likely to use female sterilization, a highly effective method, suggests there may be variability in disparities in contraceptive use across a woman's life course. We sought to assess the relationship between race/ethnicity and contraceptive use in a nationally representative sample and to approximate a life course perspective by examining effect modification on these disparities by women's age, parity, and history of unintended pregnancy.
We conducted an analysis of the 2006 through 2010 National Survey of Family Growth to determine the association between race/ethnicity and: (1) use of any method; (2) use of a highly or moderately effective method among women using contraception; and (3) use of a highly effective method among women using contraception. We then performed analyses to assess interactions between race/ethnicity and age, parity, and history of unintended pregnancy.
Our sample included 7214 females aged 15-44 years. Compared to whites, blacks were less likely to use any contraceptive method (adjusted odds ratio, 0.65); and blacks and Hispanics were less likely to use a highly or moderately effective method (adjusted odds ratio, 0.49 and 0.57, respectively). Interaction analyses revealed that racial/ethnic disparities in contraceptive use varied by women's age, with younger women having more prominent disparities.
Interventions designed to address disparities in unintended pregnancy should focus on improving contraceptive use among younger women.
美国意外怀孕的差异部分与黑人及西班牙裔女性总体上更不可能使用有效的避孕方法有关。然而,这些群体更有可能使用女性绝育这一高效避孕方法,这表明在女性的整个生命周期中,避孕方法的使用差异可能存在差异。我们试图在一个全国代表性样本中评估种族/族裔与避孕使用之间的关系,并通过检查女性年龄、生育次数和意外怀孕史对这些差异的修正作用来近似生命历程的视角。
我们对 2006 年至 2010 年全国家庭增长调查进行了分析,以确定种族/族裔与以下方面之间的关联:(1)使用任何方法;(2)使用避孕的女性中高度或中度有效的方法;(3)使用避孕的女性中高度有效的方法。然后,我们进行了分析,以评估种族/族裔与年龄、生育次数和意外怀孕史之间的相互作用。
我们的样本包括 7214 名年龄在 15-44 岁的女性。与白人相比,黑人使用任何避孕方法的可能性较小(调整后的优势比,0.65);黑人女性和西班牙裔女性使用高度或中度有效的方法的可能性较小(调整后的优势比,0.49 和 0.57)。交互分析显示,避孕使用的种族/族裔差异因女性年龄而异,年轻女性的差异更为显著。
旨在解决意外怀孕差异的干预措施应侧重于提高年轻女性的避孕使用率。