Upadhyay Ushma D, Raifman Sarah, Raine-Bennett Tina
Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health, Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health, University of California, San Francisco, 1330 Broadway, Suite 1100, Oakland, CA 94612.
Women's Health Research Institute, Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, 2000 Broadway, 3rd Floor, 032R06, Oakland, CA 94612.
Contraception. 2016 Jul;94(1):68-73. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2016.02.025. Epub 2016 Mar 16.
To understand how relationship status influences contraceptive use among young people.
Data were collected as part of a longitudinal study on hormonal contraception among unmarried adolescent and young women who wanted to avoid pregnancy for at least one year, recruited at family planning clinics in the San Francisco Bay Area. Follow-up surveys were completed at 3, 6, and 12months. Longitudinal analysis was used to examine whether relationship characteristics, including type and length of sexual relationship are associated with current use of effective contraception.
Among women with a partner at baseline, 78%, 70%, and 61% had the same partner at 3, 6, and 12months follow up, respectively. Women in casual relationships were less likely to use effective contraceptive methods, compared to women in consistent relationships (AOR=0.67, p<.01). Women in new relationships (0-3months) were less likely to use effective contraceptive methods (AOR=0.60, p<.001) compared to women in relationships more than one year in length. Younger women (AOR=0.76, p<.05), black women (AOR=0.67, p<.05) and Latina women (AOR=0.73, p<.05) were also significantly less likely to use effective contraception. These effects remained even after controlling for condom use.
Relationship type and length are independently significantly associated with current effective contraceptive use among adolescent and young women. Women in casual relationships and new relationships were significantly less likely to use effective contraceptive methods.
Family planning providers should discuss women's relationship context and association with contraceptive use in order to help women think of contraception as a long-term personal strategy. Since relationship status affects contraceptive use, providers and programs that aim to reduce unintended pregnancy can consider strategies to create a paradigm shift around contraceptive use that focuses on the woman's reproductive goals, current life stage, and life goals.
了解恋爱状况如何影响年轻人的避孕措施使用情况。
数据收集自一项关于激素避孕的纵向研究,研究对象为旧金山湾区计划生育诊所招募的未婚青少年及年轻女性,她们希望至少一年内避免怀孕。在3个月、6个月和12个月时完成随访调查。采用纵向分析来检验恋爱特征,包括恋爱关系的类型和时长,是否与当前有效避孕措施的使用有关。
在基线时有伴侣的女性中,分别有78%、70%和61%在3个月、6个月和12个月随访时仍与同一伴侣保持关系。与处于稳定恋爱关系的女性相比,处于随意恋爱关系的女性使用有效避孕方法的可能性较小(调整后比值比[AOR]=0.67,p<0.01)。与恋爱时长超过一年的女性相比,处于新恋爱关系(0 - 3个月)的女性使用有效避孕方法的可能性较小(AOR=0.60,p<0.001)。年轻女性(AOR=0.76,p<0.05)、黑人女性(AOR=0.67,p<0.05)和拉丁裔女性(AOR=0.73,p<0.05)使用有效避孕措施的可能性也显著较低。即使在控制了避孕套使用情况后,这些影响仍然存在。
恋爱关系的类型和时长与青少年及年轻女性当前有效避孕措施的使用独立且显著相关。处于随意恋爱关系和新恋爱关系中的女性使用有效避孕方法的可能性显著较低。
计划生育服务提供者应讨论女性的恋爱背景及其与避孕措施使用的关联,以帮助女性将避孕视为一项长期的个人策略。由于恋爱状况会影响避孕措施的使用,旨在减少意外怀孕的服务提供者和项目可考虑采取策略,围绕避孕措施的使用促成范式转变,该转变应关注女性的生殖目标、当前生活阶段和生活目标。