Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
Department of Urology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
Contraception. 2018 Sep;98(3):247-251. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2018.05.011. Epub 2018 May 18.
To assess variability in the use of surgical sterilization among privately insured U.S. men and women.
We queried the MarketScan Commercial Claims database using CPT, ICD9, and HCPCS codes to identify 658,509 individuals between 18-65 years old (0.37% of total) who underwent male or female sterilization between 2009-2014. We examined annual trends using Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test. We analyzed differences in age, geographic distribution, and family size using Wilcoxon sum-rank and generalized chi-squared tests.
Between 2009-2014, 422,290 men (0.55% of total men) and 236,219 women (0.24% of total women) with employer-sponsored insurance underwent male and female sterilization, respectively. Annual male sterilizations decreased from 77,565 (0.60%) in 2009 to 61,436 (0.51%) in 2014 (p<.001), while annual female sterilizations decreased from 43,766 (0.26%) to 30,465 (0.19%) (p<.001) over the same time period. Median age at time of male or female sterilization was 38 and 37 years, respectively. The decision to undergo sterilization at age 35 or older was associated with family size of 4 or more individuals (p<.001). Sterilization was more common in urban areas, with 84% of male sterilizations and 79% of female sterilizations performed in urban areas. 79% of men compared to 60% of women who underwent sterilization were the primary policyholders of their employer-sponsored healthcare plans (p<.001).
Male sterilization was twice as common as female sterilization in this privately insured cohort. Use of surgical sterilization was associated with increased age and larger family size. There was a decline in the annual number of male and female sterilizations during the study period.
Male sterilization is more common among US men with employer-based insurance than among the general population. The decline in sterilization may reflect cultural factors and the rise of long-acting reversible contraception. Analyzing the sociodemographic factors impacting sterilization may provide insight into contraceptive choice and improve reproductive health services.
评估美国私人保险男性和女性中手术绝育的使用差异。
我们使用 CPT、ICD9 和 HCPCS 代码查询 MarketScan 商业索赔数据库,以确定 2009 年至 2014 年间进行男性或女性绝育的 658509 名 18-65 岁个体(占总人数的 0.37%)。我们使用 Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel 检验检查年度趋势。我们使用 Wilcoxon 总和秩和广义卡方检验分析年龄、地理分布和家庭规模的差异。
2009 年至 2014 年,422290 名男性(男性总数的 0.55%)和 236219 名女性(女性总数的 0.24%)接受了男性和女性绝育术。男性绝育术的年发生率从 2009 年的 77565(0.60%)下降到 2014 年的 61436(0.51%)(p<.001),而同期女性绝育术的年发生率从 43766(0.26%)下降到 30465(0.19%)(p<.001)。男性或女性绝育时的中位年龄分别为 38 岁和 37 岁。35 岁或以上决定绝育与 4 人或以上的家庭规模相关(p<.001)。绝育术在城市地区更为常见,84%的男性绝育术和 79%的女性绝育术在城市地区进行。与 60%的女性绝育者相比,79%的男性绝育者是雇主赞助医疗保健计划的主要参保人(p<.001)。
在这个私人保险队列中,男性绝育术比女性绝育术常见两倍。手术绝育的使用与年龄增大和家庭规模增大有关。在研究期间,每年的男性和女性绝育术数量均有所下降。
在美国有雇主保险的男性中,男性绝育术比一般人群更为常见。绝育术的下降可能反映了文化因素和长效可逆避孕措施的兴起。分析影响绝育术的社会人口因素可以深入了解避孕选择,并改善生殖健康服务。